ADEN, Yemen — A large crowd of protesters rallied in southern Yemen on Friday to call for the secession of the south and to show support for an Emirati-backed southern separatist group more than a week after it dismantled itself.
Supporters of the Southern Transitional Council, or STC, rallied in Khor Maksar district, where Aden's international airport is located. Last weekend, protesters held a rally at the same location in Aden, Yemen's interim capital where the internationally recognized government is based.
The STC's satellite news channel, AIC, aired footage showing what appeared to be thousands of demonstrators chanting slogans against Saudi Arabia and in support of STC leader Aidarous al-Zubaidi and the Council's declaration of an independent south.
The people carried flags of South Yemen, which existed as an independent state from 1967 to 1990, and some carried posters of al-Zubaidi, who, according to STC media footage, fled Aden to the United Arab Emirates earlier this month.
A separatist dream
The separatist demands in southern Yemen are one element in a complex civil war that has gripped the county since 2014, when Houthi rebels backed by Iran descended from their northern stronghold and seized the capital, Sanaa, forcing the internationally recognized government to flee first southward, then into exile in Saudi Arabia.
The war involves a complex interplay of sectarian and tribal grievances and the involvement of regional powers.
The STC was established in 2017 as an umbrella organization for groups that seek to restore southern Yemen as an independent state. Its support has been fed by grievances caused by a sense that people in the south did not benefit in a unified Yemen.