Yemen
Intro
The country remains divided between the internationally recognized government in Aden and Houthi-controlled north. Iranian and Saudi involvement entrenches stalemate. Economic collapse, famine, and disease outbreaks define daily life for millions.
Background
Historically two separate entities, Yemen unified in 1990 but soon fell into civil strife. The 2011 Arab Spring uprisings ended Ali Abdullah Saleh’s long rule, followed by Houthi insurgency and Saudi-led intervention in 2015. Infrastructure destruction and displacement shattered social fabric. Tribal networks fill governance gaps.
History
- 1990: Unification of North and South Yemen – 1994: Civil war consolidates northern control – 2011: Uprising removes President Saleh – 2015: Saudi-led coalition intervenes – 2020s: Continued division; limited ceasefire progress
Present Day
In 2025, the fragile truce continues, supported by UN oversight. Aden functions as an interim capital, while Houthi governance consolidates in Sana’a. Humanitarian aid faces logistical barriers.
Future Outlook
Without comprehensive peace, Yemen risks long-term fragmentation akin to Somalia. A sustainable solution requires decentralized governance, economic reconstruction, and external mediation beyond Saudi-Iran frameworks.
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