(Reuters) - The
United Nations Security Council imposed targeted sanctions on Friday on
Yemen's former President Ali Abdullah Saleh and two senior Houthi rebel
leaders for threatening the peace and stability of the country and
obstructing the political process. Lithuanian U.N. Ambassador Raimonda Murmokaite, chair of the council's Yemen
sanctions committee, said all 15 members had agreed to blacklist Saleh
and Houthi rebel military leaders Abd al-Khaliq al-Huthi and Abdullah
Yahya al Hakim. The three men are now subject to a global travel ban and
asset freeze. Saleh has denied seeking to destabilize Yemen
and his party warned after a meeting on Thursday that any sanctions on
the former president or "even waving such a threat would have negative
consequences on the political process." The
U.N. Security Council in February authorized sanctions against anyone
in Yemen who obstructs the country's political transition or commits
human rights violations, but stopped short of blacklisting any specific
individuals. The United
States submitted a formal request to the Yemen sanctions committee a
week ago for Saleh and the Houthi leaders to be the first people
designated. “With today’s
designations, members of the Security Council have made clear that the
international community will not tolerate efforts to use violence to
thwart the legitimate aspirations of the Yemeni people and their ongoing
political transition," said a U.S. official, speaking on condition of
anonymity. Yemen, a
U.S. ally that borders oil-producer Saudi Arabia, is trying to end
political unrest that began with mass protests against Saleh, president
for 33 years until he stepped down in 2012. "As
of fall 2012 Ali Abdullah Saleh had reportedly become one of the
primary supporters of the Huthi rebellion. Saleh was behind the attempts
to cause chaos throughout Yemen," the United States said in a
"statement of case" obtained by Reuters. "More
recently, as of September 2014, Saleh is reportedly inciting
instability in Yemen by using the Huthi dissident group to not only
delegitimize the central government, but also create enough instability
to stage a coup," it said. Fighting
has flared in different parts of Yemen since the Houthis, a group of
Shi'ite Muslim rebels, rose to dominance in recent months, threatening
the fragile stability of a country bordering on Saudi Arabia, the
world's biggest oil exporter. Houthi
forces took over the capital, Sanaa, in September and fanned out into
central and western Yemen. That antagonized Sunni tribesmen and al Qaeda
militants, who regard the Houthis as heretics. "In
late September 2014, an unknown number of unidentified Huthi movement
fighters allegedly were prepared to attack the U.S. Embassy in Sana'a,
Yemen, upon receiving orders from Huthi military commander of Sana'a,
Abd al-Khaliq al-Huthi," said the United States 'statement of case'
against al-Huthi. It said
the role of al Hakim was to organize military operations "to be able to
topple the Yemeni government" and that he was responsible for securing
and controlling all routes in and out of Sanaa.
U.N. sanctions Yemen's ex-President Saleh, two rebel leaders

Reuters
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