Bin Mubarak announced in his social network account the decision to resign, after making “all possible efforts to restore the state”
Yemen Prime Minister Ahmed Bin Mubarak resigned today after regretting that his mandate was limited to the point of not being able to realize the reforms he intended for the country.
Bin Mubarak announced in his social network account the decision to resign, after making “all possible efforts to restore the state,” said Europe Press today.
Bin Mubarak resigned after just over a year in the position he took over in February 2024.
In the same publication, “many difficulties and challenges,” including the impossibility of fully applying their constitutional powers “to make the necessary decisions to reform a number of institutions and rebuild the state.”
The government hosted in Aden after its expulsion in late 2014 of the capital, Sana’a, for the Houthi insurrection that still controls the city and much of the country.
The Yemen, devastated by a decade of Civil War, is now the scene of a US bombing campaign against rebel attacks to Israel and Navigation in the Red Sea, in solidarity with the Palestinian cause, according to Houthi leaders.
Bin Mubarak was kidnapped by the Houthis when he performed the duties of Iémen presidential chief of staff during a power struggle with then -President Abdo Rabbu Mansur Hadi.
Its capture was considered as one of the main precursors of the beginning of the armed conflict in Yemen, the scene of one of the worst humanitarian crises in the world.