The Yemeni Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Interior Ahmed Al-Misri called the government of Moeen Abdul Malik to leave, and confirmed the authenticity of the message published by Al-Jazeera, which was sent by 12 ministers to President Abd Rabbuh Mansour Hadi, demanding reforms in the cabinet.

Al-Misiri considered it "unacceptable that the government and its president continue in this important historical juncture," stressing that he is one of the signers of the said message, and that there is almost unanimity that government members are not satisfied with the work of its president.

In a letter to President Hadi, ministers in the Yemeni government called for speedy intervention and taking the necessary measures to carry out reforms in the cabinet.

The letter, which bears the names of 12 ministers, revealed what she described as a conflict between Prime Minister Moein Abdel Malik and several members of the government, which amounted to issuing arrest warrants that led to the resignation of a number of ministers.

The letter stated that the differences between the Prime Minister and a number of members of the Council contribute to weakening the government and undermine citizen confidence in it.

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The letter described the actions taken by the prime minister as "illegal" and that "they are without any constitutional basis, and they come at a time when the Yemeni government is suffering almost complete paralysis."

In their letter, the ministers affirmed that a minister was suspended from his duties and referred to trial, from the prerogatives of the presidency or the legislature only.

The ministers of transport, insurance and the environment had resigned from their posts in protest against what they described as the practices of the prime minister and the disruption of its performance.

In a previous interview with Al-Jazeera Net, the Yemeni Minister of Transport, Saleh al-Jabwani, who is the first minister to announce their resignation, said that Hadi is not satisfied with what the prime minister is doing, “but he was caught between the actions of the coupists in Sana'a and Aden, and between his need for an alliance and the pressure exerted on him. By this alliance at the same time. "

Al-Jibwani told Al-Jazeera Net that "my suspension by the prime minister is considered a weakening of legitimacy and for the president, because we were fighting inside the legitimacy so that it would not fall permanently and become a tool to legislate the fragmentation and division and the sale of Yemeni lands."

According to a government official, who requested anonymity, the reasons for the conflict within the wings of legitimacy are due to hidden disputes that started many months ago between the prime minister and a number of ministers, led by Minister of Transport Saleh al-Jabwani, whose criticism has also become a nuisance to Saudi Arabia and the UAE.