HE Dr Khalid bin Mohamed al-Attiyah presides over the GCC meeting in Riyadh on Thursday.

AFP/Riyadh

Talks aimed at pulling Yemen out of crisis are open to the Shia Houthi militia which seized power in Sanaa last month, Qatar's Foreign Minister HE Dr Khalid bin Mohamed al-Attiyah said on Thursday.

The Houthis have opposed any change in venue for UN-brokered talks, which broke down after Western-backed President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi escaped from house arrest in Sanaa last month.

Hadi, who has resumed power from second city Aden in the south, has proposed that talks move to neighbouring Saudi Arabia.

The Gulf Cooperation Council members agreed to that request last Monday but have not set a date for the meeting.

"The invitation concerns the Houthis," HE Dr al-Attiyah, whose country currently holds the GCC's rotating presidency, told reporters following a meeting of Gulf foreign ministers in the Saudi capital.

"It's their business to accept or not."

Hadi’s conditions

GCC Secretary General Abdullatif al-Zayani confirmed that "the invitation was addressed to all" protagonists in the crisis in Yemen, which is a frontline in the US war against Al-Qaeda.

At the joint news conference with HE Dr al-Attiyah, Zayani underlined that anyone joining the negotiations must adhere to Hadi's conditions.

These include rejecting "the coup d'etat" by the Houthis, returning seized military equipment and allowing the state "to recover its authority over all territory," Hadi said in a letter to Saudi King Salman.

The talks would aim for a resumption of the political process begun after the departure of former president Ali Abdullah Saleh in early 2012 after a bloody year-long popular uprising.

The process, which stalled after Houthis overran Sanaa in September, called for turning the republic into a federation of six regions - a move rejected by the Houthis who say it would divide Yemen into rich and poor areas.

They have instead favoured the "national dialogue" in the capital Sanaa under the supervision of UN envoy Jamal Benomar.

The planned talks in Riyadh would be a separate initiative, Zayani said.

Saleh's General People's Congress party has also warned that it will boycott talks held outside Sanaa. Saleh is widely accused of backing the Houthis.

Separatists from southern Yemen have, meanwhile, suspended their participation in the UN-sponsored discussions until they are moved abroad.

Syrian conflict

Separately, the Gulf states discussed the four-year conflict in Syria that has left at least 210,000 people dead and reiterated their calls for embattled President Bashar al-Assad to step down.

A statement said the GCC hopes a "political solution" could lead to the formation of "a transitional government with full executive powers" to resolve the conflict.

The GCC also "denounced" remarks by Swedish Foreign Minister Margot Wallstroem criticising the human rights situation in Saudi Arabia.

These statements constitute a "flagrant interference in the kingdom's internal affairs," said the GCC ministers, mirroring Saudi Arabia's position.

Saudi Arabia has recalled its ambassador to Sweden, accusing it of flagrant interference in its internal affairs as Stockholm cut military ties with the oil-rich state.

Related Story