Yemen government names finance minister as new PM

Ahmad Awad bin Mubarak, former Prime Minister of Yemen's internationally-recognised government, speaks during the fifth observance of the "International Day to Protect Education from Attack" at the Qatar National Convention Centre in Doha on September 9, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 03 May 2025
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Yemen government names finance minister as new PM

  • Mubarak said he had faced “lots of difficulties”, including being unable to reshuffle the government

DUBAI: Yemen’s internationally recognized government named finance minister Salem bin Buraik as its new prime minister on Saturday, after his predecessor quit saying he was unable to fully exercise his powers.

Outgoing premier Ahmed Bin Mubarak had disputed for months with Rashad Al-Alimi, who heads the Presidential Leadership Council, two ministers and a member of the PLC told AFP.

Alimi named Bin Buraik prime minister in a decision published by the official Saba news agency. No other ministerial changes were announced.

Analyst Mohammed Albasha, of the US-based Basha Report Risk Advisory, posted on X that Bin Buraik is seen as non-confrontational — “a sharp contrast to his predecessor, with whom much of the cabinet, and even the president, had fallen out.”

After Iran-backed Houthis seized the capital Sanaa in 2014, Yemen’s government withdrew to Aden in the south.

The militia went on to control most population centers in the impoverished Arabian Peninsula country.

Bin Mubarak earlier posted on X that he had handed Alimi his letter of resignation.

In it he said: “I could not exercise my constitutional powers and take the necessary decisions to reform government institutions or implement rightful governmental changes.”

The changes come as the Houthis who control much of Yemen wage fire missiles at Israel and target shipping in key waterways in what they say is a show of solidarity with Palestinians over the war in Gaza.

In his resignation letter, Bin Mubarak said that despite the obstacles he had achieved “many successes,” citing fiscal and administrative reforms and an anti-corruption drive.

However, Albasha told AFP Bin Mubarak had been “in constant friction with the Presidential Leadership Council.”

“Bin Mubarak wanted to be more than Prime Minister — he wanted the powers of the presidency. That aspiration isolated him politically,” Albasha said.

The three Yemeni official sources, who spoke to AFP requested anonymity in order to speak freely, said Bin Mubarak had suspended the budgets of several ministries including defense, citing corruption, further fueling tensions.

“His drive for greater power — viewed by many as fueled by personal ambition — led to repeated confrontations with key ministers and most Council members,” Albasha said.

Yemen’s former ambassador to the US and envoy to the UN, Bin Mubarak is a staunch adversary of the Houthis, who abducted him in 2015 and held him for several days.

He became foreign minister in 2018 and prime minister in February last year.

His departure should “ease internal tensions and reduce the deep divisions that have plagued Yemen’s internationally recognized government — a necessary and positive step toward restoring cohesion,” Albasha said.

The conflict in Yemen has caused hundreds of thousands of deaths and triggered one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises, although the fighting decreased significantly after a UN-negotiated six-month truce in 2022.

Since the Gaza war erupted in October 2023 after Hamas attacked Israel, the Houthis have repeatedly targeted Israel and ships in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden that they say are linked to it.

They paused their attacks during a two-month Gaza ceasefire, but in March a threat to resume attacks over Israel’s Gaza aid blockade triggered a renewed and sustained US air campaign targeting areas in Yemen they control.


Six dead as Gaza’s displaced struggle in torrential rain

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Six dead as Gaza’s displaced struggle in torrential rain

  • Five people, including two women and a girl, die when homes collapsed near Gaza City
  • One-year-old boy died of extreme cold in a tent in Deir Al-Balah in central Gaza
CAIRO/GAZA: A rainstorm swept across the Gaza Strip on Tuesday, flooding hundreds of tents, collapsing homes sheltering ​families displaced by two years of war and killing at least six people, local health officials said.
Medics said five people, including two women and a girl, died when homes collapsed near Gaza City’s beach, while a one-year-old boy died of extreme cold in a tent in Deir Al-Balah in central Gaza.
Tents were torn from their stakes, some flying dozens of meters before crashing to the ground. Others lay crumpled in muddy pools as families scrambled to salvage what they could. Residents tried to re-secure remaining shelters, hammering in loosened pegs and stacking sandbags around the edges ‌to keep floodwaters from ‌pouring inside.
“We didn’t realize what was happening until the wall ‌started collapsing — ⁠an ​eight-meter-high ‌wall, a strong concrete wall. Because of the speed and force of the wind, the wall fell on top of us, onto three tents,” said Bassel Hamuda, a displaced man in Gaza.
“The elderly man, 73 years old, was martyred. His son’s wife was killed, and his son’s daughter was killed,” he told Reuters.
Three months since a ceasefire halted major combat, Israeli forces have ordered the near-total depopulation of nearly two thirds of Gaza, forcing its more than 2 million people into a narrow strip near ⁠the coast where most live either in makeshift tents or damaged buildings.

RELATIVES GATHER AT MORGUE

Dozens of relatives gathered at a hospital ‌morgue on Tuesday for special prayers over bodies laid on ‍medical stretchers before the funerals.
The Hamas-run Gaza government ‍media office said at least 31 Palestinians had died since the start of the winter ‍season from exposure to cold or the collapse of unsafe buildings damaged by previous Israeli strikes.
It said about 7,000 tents were damaged in the past 48 hours, most of whose occupants have no alternative shelter.
Municipal and civil defense officials said they were unable to cope with the storm because of fuel shortages and ​damaged equipment. During the war Israel had destroyed hundreds of vehicles needed to respond to the weather emergency, including bulldozers and water pumps.
In December, a UN report said ⁠761 displacement sites hosting about 850,000 people were at high risk of flooding, and thousands had moved in anticipation of heavy rain.
UN and Palestinian officials said at least 300,000 new tents were urgently needed for the roughly 1.5 million people still displaced. Most existing shelters are worn out or made of thin plastic and cloth sheeting.
“In Gaza, winter weather is adding to the suffering of families already pushed to the brink by over two years of war,” UNRWA, the UN Palestinian refugee agency, said in a post on X on Tuesday.
“Flooding, cold temperatures, and damaged shelters are exposing displaced people to new risks, while humanitarian access remains severely constrained,” it added.
In a statement on Tuesday, Hamas urged mediators of the Gaza ceasefire deal that began in October to compel Israel to allow the unconditional flow ‌of aid, shelter, and rebuilding materials.
Israel says hundreds of trucks enter Gaza daily carrying food, medical supplies and shelter equipment. International aid organizations say the supplies are still insufficient.