On Friday, the Yemenis attended massive rallies all over the country to express their support for the Shia revolutionaries, chanting "death to America” and “death to Israel” slogans.
The demonstration came a day after the Yemeni President Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi and the cabinet of Prime Minister Khaled Bahah resigned over pressure from Ansarullah revolutionaries.
Reports say the Yemeni parliament rejected Hadi’s resignation, calling for an emergency session.
The parliament’s move greatly infuriated Ansarullah supporters who surrounded the parliament in Sana’a in an attempt to pressure the legislative body to reconsider its decision.
Some representatives of Ansarullah revolutionaries said the Shia group welcomes the resignations of the Yemeni president and cabinet and may form a "salvation council" with members from different political groups from the country’s north and south.
Meanwhile, the southern Yemen separatists launched rallies in the city of Aden, calling for independence from the central government in the country’s capital, Sana’a.
In Aden the separatists raised the flag of Southern Yemen over the airport and some of the government buildings.
Yemeni supporters of the separatist Southern Movement take part in a demonstration following the Friday prayers on January 23, 2015 in the southern city of Aden to demand renewed independence of the South.
Southern Yemen was formerly an independent country which merged with the northern Yemen Republic to form present-day Yemen in 1990.
Yemen has been the scene of tensions after the Shia fighters arrested Ahmed Awad bin Mubarak, Hadi’s chief of staff, at a checkpoint in the western district of Hada on January 17,One of main reason for this differences is Ansarallah accused government for supporting local al –Qaeda.
The impoverished Arab country is currently grappling with a severe political crisis between the central government and Ansarullah fighters.
In September 2014, Ansarullah revolutionary fighters gained control of Sana’a following a four-day battle with army forces loyal to General Ali Mohsen al-Ahmar, the half-brother of the country’s former dictator, Ali Abdullah Saleh.
In the same month, Ansarullah fighters and the Yemeni government inked the UN-backed ceasefire deal that called for the withdrawal of the revolutionaries from the capital once a neutral prime minister was picked. The deal has failed to deliver any practical results so far.