Al-Transitional leader reveals date for new government

English - Thursday 06 August 2020 الساعة 07:38 pm
Aden, Newsyemen:

Ali al-Qati, a member of the presidency of the Southern Transitional Council (SIC), deputy head of the negotiations unit, said that next week will see the resumption of the process of political consultations with the "legitimacy", in the Saudi capital, to form a competent government and continue to implement the terms of the Riyadh agreement.


The Deputy Head of the Negotiations Unit of the Southern Transitional Council (SIC) noted that there are parties in the legitimate government that do not hesitate to declare their refusal to implement the Riyadh Agreement, and seek to abort it as a result of its association with regional expansionist projects hostile to the Arab alliance.


"Together, we must seek to block any attempts to undermine the agreement, and to discourage any regional interventions that threaten Arab national security," he said.


Al-Kasari said that the announcement of the executive mechanism of the Riyadh agreement came to end the deadlock that accompanied the agreement process over the past nine months and the resulting escalation of tension in the southern provinces, which reached the point where parties in the legitimate government launched a military operation aimed at overthrowing Aden and before that the riyadh agreement was dropped.


He continued: "That is why the intervention of the brothers in Saudi Arabia was welcomed by us in the Southern Transitional Council, we invited them to come to Riyadh to restore normalcy by finding a mechanism to speed up the implementation of the agreement, which was announced just before eid al-Adha, and our hands are outstretched for peace and we work with all sincerity and seriousness to implement the Riyadh agreement."


In an interview with Erm News, al-Kawsari stressed that the government, which is to be formed within a month, should focus on uniting everyone's efforts to confront Houthi militias and "terrorist groups", and work to consolidate stability in liberated provinces and secure services, adding: "If the government is preoccupied with the machinations, it will certainly fail miserably."