Yemeni academic and researcher Adel Dashila explained that the accusations of the UAE-backed transitional council of the Yemeni government of not wanting to resolve the battles are not new, but they come within what he described as the catastrophic failure of the Arab coalition, considering that one of the basics of the Riyadh agreement is to unite efforts to end the military rebellion in the north, and " But whenever the Yemeni government tries to advance militarily towards the north, the transitional council opens fronts in the south or armed coups. "

Dashela's statements came during his hosting of the Sunday (5/31/2020) episode of the "Beyond the News" program, which discussed the implications of the recent accusation of the Transitional Council accusing the Yemeni government.

He stressed that those who hinder military progress in the north are the Emirati moves in the southern regions, within the framework of the failed strategy - as he described it - for the Arab coalition, which has not been able, until now, to control militarily or politically in Yemen.

For his part, Adel Al-Hassani, who is one of the leaders of the southern Yemeni resistance, considered that the statements supported by the Emirates are considered an escape from failure, after the transitional council announced the self-management of the southern governorates, but it was met with widespread popular rejection of this administration, stressing that the leaders of the transitional council are making Fake battles and rumors about the issue of pressure on the coalition, stressing that Turkey did not interfere in Yemen.

Fronts falling,
On the other hand, Hussein Al-Hanashi, publisher and editor-in-chief of the weekly newspaper "Al-Marsad" issued in Aden, said that the accusations of the transitional government of the legitimate government are based on the fall of the fronts in the north, while what he called the militias with a Turkish agenda are sent to Abyan to fight the southerners.

Al-Hanashi accused the Yemeni government, specifically the Brotherhood, which controls the opinion of legality as a whole - as he put it - by thwarting all coalition attempts to head north and fight the Houthis.

It is noteworthy that the spokesman for the southern transitional council supported by the Emirates accused what he called parties in the Yemeni government by pressuring the Saudi-Emirati coalition to not resolve the battles against the Houthis, in exchange for escalation in the south. This comes as reinforcements continue in Abyan in preparation for a new wave of fighting.