Judge Qinan alerts the government: the Brotherhood and dealing with the south with a 7/7 mentality and the absence of any northern weight

English - Sunday 20 December 2020 الساعة 08:30 am
Aden, NewsYemen, Exclusive:

Judge Amin Nasser Qinan, head of the Al Wad'a Court of First Instance and a member of the Judicial Club, said that the chances of success of the new government depends on their handling.

He added, "The government came in light of the continuation of the southern issue as a pressing factor against any ruling system based on the 7/7 Law system," considering that as a threat that reduces its chances of success if it continues to deal with the same mentality before the liberation of the south in 2016.  

He pointed out that Aden "will have more obstacles to work (that is, a government left over from this trend)."

Judge Qinan told "NewsYemen": "In the south, the Southern Transitional Council is trying to be one of the levers on which the government relies for success, but this is a double-edged sword, on the one hand it will benefit the government from the popular, political and military support represented by the Southern Transitional, and on the one hand it will constitute that public pressure on it in the event that it deviates from the text decreed for it by the southern people.

As for the north, he expressed his fear that it might be one of the reasons for defeating legitimacy in the north because the government is devoid of the anti-Houthi hawks of the north, saying: “There is no person within the new government who has tribal, political or social influence who can be invested in confronting the Houthi.

According to Judge Qinan, the government was formed “in light of very strong political turmoil and controversy practiced by international agendas and internal agendas that coincided with a miserable economic situation.” The most important concerns that it may fail are “the Muslim Brotherhood organization, its diplomatic wings and its major political wings in Turkey and Qatar, in addition to its internal wings formed from the ideological Brotherhood’s army, which was prepared in Taiz and Marib.

Therefore, according to the judge's opinion, "the requirements for success are that there be generous support from the Arab coalition and that this support be at several levels, economic, political, military, security and diplomatic."

Noting the danger of "the diplomatic expansion that the Houthis are beginning to obtain in some Arab and Islamic countries and offices inside European capitals," and said: "That is why coalition diplomacy must press for the success of this government externally to besiege the Houthi."