The rebels who overran Sanaa in September also dismissed UN Security Council sanctions imposed on Friday on ousted president Ali Abdullah Saleh and two senior rebel commanders as a "flagrant provocation" to Yemenis.
The cabinet, formed yesterday and welcomed by Washington, "is in violation of the peace agreement... And a clear obstruction to the political process in favour of private and narrow interests," the rebels said in a statement.
The rebels, also known as Ansarullah, said the cabinet should be reshuffled to "remove those not meeting the criteria" spelled out in the peace agreement signed on September 21, when the rebels seized the capital unopposed.
The new government was formed as part of a UN-brokered peace deal under which the Huthis are supposed to withdraw from the capital Sanaa, which they seized control of in September.
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On November 1, the main parties signed an agreement brokered by UN envoy to Yemen Jamal Benomar for the formation of a government of technocrats.
Under the accord, representatives of the rebels and their rivals, the Sunni Al-Islah (Reform) Islamic party, mandated Hadi to form a government and committed to support it.