Houthi Shiite Yemeni wearing army uniforms stand guard on a street leading to the presidential palace in Sanaa.
Sanaa:
Two parties walked out of resumed talks on Yemen's political crisis on today after saying they had received threats from the country's dominant Houthi movement.
Yemen's years-long political crisis risks escalating into a full-blown civil war pitting regional, political, tribal and sectarian rivals against each other in a nation that shares a long border with top global oil exporter Saudi Arabia.
Western countries also fear that further chaos in Yemen could give more space to a branch of Al Qaeda based there, which has attempted to launch attacks on international airliners.
Islah, a big opposition party that merges Islamist and tribal interests, and the smaller Nasserist Organisation, quit today's first round of talks saying they had been threatened by a Houthi representative at the negotiations, Mehdi al-Meshaat.
"He (Meshaat) wanted to impose the choices of the group by force," said Nasserite Organisation secretary general Abdullah al-Noman.
The Shi'ite Houthis seized control of the Yemeni capital Sanaa last September after a decade-long rebellion and overran the homes of top officials last month, leading former president Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi and his government to resign.
Last Friday the Houthi group, headed by Abdel-Malik al Houthi, said it would impose a new "presidential council" on Yemen in a unilateral declaration that was initially rejected by most other factions in the country.
However, on yesterday the United Nations envoy Jamal Benomar said new talks between the Houthis and other parties to resolve the crisis would take place.
© Thomson Reuters 2015
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