Thousands of southern Yemenis demonstrated today in Aden demanding the secession of their formerly independent region, three months after Shiite rebels were driven out.
The demonstration was the first open call for secession since southern forces allied with the government and backed by a Saudi-led coalition pushed the rebels out of Aden and other provinces.
But now that the rebel threat has eased, protesters said they do not want to continue the fight against the insurgents in the north and demanded their own state.
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Marching to commemorate the anniversary of independence from Britain in 1967, protesters carried flags of the former South Yemen state, which was united with the north in 1990.
A secession attempt in 1994 was crushed by northern forces.
Most of the north is now controlled by the Huthi rebels and their allies of forces loyal to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, since the rebels seized the capital Sanaa unopposed in September 2014 and moved on to capture other provinces.
After pushing the rebels out of five southern provinces in the summer, thanks to air and ground support from the coalition, forces loyal to President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi have set their sights on Marib province east of Sanaa.
But the southerners have other ambitions.
"After achieving victory in the battle, the people of the south adhere to their political demand voiced in 1994, which is reinstating the southern state," said Omar al-Subeihi, the head of the rally organising committee.
The Saudi-led coalition launched an air campaign late March in support of Hadi after the rebels closed in on his last refuge in Aden, before he fled to Riyadh.