Japan shuts embassy in strife-torn Yemen

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has warned that Yemen is falling apart

Update: 2015-02-16 13:15 GMT
Yemeni protesters shout slogans against Houthi Shiites who have seized power in the capital, Sanaa. The United States, Britain and France moved to close their embassies in Yemen on Wednesday, increasing the isolation of Shiite rebels who have seized
Tokyo: Japan said Monday it had temporarily shut its embassy in Yemen, adding to the latest exodus of foreign diplomats over security fears after a Shiite militia takeover.
Operations at the mission in Sanaa were suspended as of Sunday due to the "worsening security situation" in the country, the foreign ministry said.
 
Its staff have evacuated to the Japanese embassy in Qatar, from where they will be fulfilling some duties. Tokyo has urged its citizens to leave the strife-racked country as the security situation deteriorates.
 
Huthi militiamen dissolved Yemen's government and parliament on February 6 after seizing the presidential palace and key government buildings.
 
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has warned that Yemen is falling apart, and called for the reinstatement of Western-backed President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi.
 
Sunni-dominated regional powerhouse Saudi Arabia last week announced it had evacuated all its staff from the embassy in Sanaa.
 
The move was also followed by the United States, France, Germany, Italy, Britain, the Netherlands, The United Arab Emirates and Spain.

 

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