The Saudi-UAE alliance said that the Southern Transitional Council units and the security belt forces started to withdraw and return to their former positions in Aden in response to his call, amid the Yemeni government official asserted that passing the coup in Aden is dropping the legitimacy of confronting the Houthi coup.

The coalition called in a statement to continue the calm and restraint and stop the media discourse, which he described as jerky, and strengthen the language of dialogue and reconciliation.

He also called for uniting efforts to end the Houthi coup and the Iranian regime project, he said, and demanded not to give the opportunity to those who he named terrorist organizations in Yemen.

The Saudi-UAE alliance appreciated the Yemeni government's legitimate response to its call for restraint during the crisis, as well as the transitional council's response in Aden to Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

The Southern Transitional Council reiterated on Thursday that the option of secession is "irreversible and irreversible," adding that "procrastination and procrastination" will increase the risks to the security of the region.

In a statement, the council applauded the UAE-Saudi alliance for its efforts to contain the recent crisis, calling for "solid ground" for secession.

The transitional expressed its readiness to participate in any dialogue sponsored by the coalition or the Gulf Cooperation Council or the United Nations or the Arab League.

On Thursday, a joint Saudi-Emirati military committee arrived in the city of Aden to discuss the withdrawal of separatist forces from positions they seized in the city last week.

A source in the government of Yemeni President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi told Agence France-Presse on Thursday that the committee arrived in Aden "to discuss the issue of the withdrawal of security belt forces from the camps and government headquarters that took control of them."

The separatists of the Transitional Council - backed by the United Arab Emirates - last week through the forces of the "security belt" on the presidential palace in the city of Aden, and major military positions of the government of Hadi in the city.

Drop the legitimacy
For his part, Yemeni Minister of Information Muammar al-Iryani said that any passage or identification with the coup of the transitional council in Aden in this circumstance drops the legitimacy of confronting the Houthi coup in Sanaa, as well as the justifications for the intervention of the Saudi-UAE military coalition.

"The passage of the coup drops the legitimacy of the Alliance to support the legitimacy to face the Houthi coup against the elected government of all the people of the Republic of Yemen with its geographical borders and legal sovereignty," he said.

"As we have faced the Iranian Houthi militia, we will face any armed formations outside the framework of the military and security establishment, and we warn of its future repercussions."

The Yemeni government on Wednesday demanded the withdrawal of southern separatists from positions they held before any political dialogue with them.

Abdul Aziz Jabbari, deputy speaker of the Yemeni parliament, accused the leadership of the UAE-Saudi alliance of "slaughtering legitimacy," and said: "You slaughtered legitimacy from vein to vein and Houthi did not do as legitimacy as you did."