Aidarus al-Zoubaidi


Aidarus Qassem Abdulaziz Al-Zubaidi is a Yemeni politician who served as chairperson of the Southern Transitional Council from 2017, and was Vice President of the Presidential Leadership Council from 2022 to 2026. He previously served as the governor of Aden Governorate from December 2015 to April 2017.

Biography

Early life and career

Zoubaidi was born on 23 July 1967 in Zubayd, a village in the mountains of Dhale Governorate in South Yemen. His family is of the Zubayd-Himyar tribe. In Zubayd, he received primary and secondary education before joining the South Yemen military. He moved to Aden where studied at the air force academy, graduating in 1988 with the rank of second lieutenant. He served as an officer in the Air Defense Forces from then on until late 1989. After the unification of Yemen in 1990, he was transferred to the Central Security Organization of the Ministry of Interior, in which he served as chief of staff for a diplomatic protection battalion in the capital of Sanaa, before later serving in the special forces.
During the Yemeni civil war of 1994, Zoubaidi sided with the breakaway Democratic Republic of Yemen and fought alongside secessionist forces against the northerners. Upon the defeat of the southerners, he fled to Djibouti in July 1994. He returned to Yemen in 1996 and founded the Hatham Movement, an insurgent group based in Dhale which advocated for the self-determination of the south. From 1997 to 1998, the group waged an assassination campaign against northern military officials, for which he was tried in absentia and sentenced to death.
The death sentence imposed in Zoubaidi was pardoned by President Ali Abdullah Saleh in 2000. From thereon, he entered the political sphere of Yemen through working with the Joint Meeting Parties, and by 2002 the Hatham Movement had become inactive. The group was revived by Zoubaidi in 2011 amidst the Yemeni revolution, during which it claimed responsibility for several attacks on the Yemeni military forces in Dhale. Clashes with his forces in the south were again reported in 2013. In early 2014, Zoubaidi announced the establishment of the Southern Resistance, a militant group aligned with the Southern Movement. His statement pledged to continue armed resistance against the Yemeni government until the achievement of an autonomous southern state.

Yemeni civil war and Aden governorship

Upon the outbreak of the Yemeni civil war, Zoubaidi aligned himself with the internationally-recognized government led by President Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi to fight against the Houthis. His Southern Resistance praised the commencement of Operation Decisive Storm by the Saudi Arabia-led coalition in March 2015. Zoubaidi led his forces in the face of a Houthi offensive in Dhale, forcing their complete withdrawal from the governorate by 25 May, the first in the south to be liberated from Houthi presence. His forces later advanced upon the al-Anad Air Base in Lahij, and participated in the Battle of Aden alongside coalition and government units. On 4 August, he declared all areas in the south as liberated from the Houthis.
Acknowledging his leverage in the south, Hadi issued a presidential decree appointing Zoubaidi as the governor of Aden on 7 December 2015. He succeeded Jaafar Mohammed Saad, who was assassinated in a car bombing claimed by the Islamic State – Yemen Province. Zoubaidi came into office during a time of extensive instability in Aden, with groups such as IS–YP and al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula occupying territory in multiple districts. Four assassination attempts against him were claimed by IS–YP during his tenure, three of which were car bombs. In response, Zoubaidi ordered a large-scale operation in early March 2016 to liberate all areas in Aden from the militant groups, which was successfully completed later in the month. Adam Baron of the European Council on Foreign Relations described these operations as only "tenuous progress", with Aden remaining rife with armed factions by the end of the year.
As Zoubaidi's tenure continued, his influence increased greatly in the region, but his relationship with the central government frayed. He and his security director, Shalal Ali Shaye, acted largely autonomously from the government's authority, cooperating with foreign actors such as the United Arab Emirates at their own will while refusing to do so sometimes with the northerner-dominated Hadi administration. On 10 September 2016, he publicly proposed the establishment of an independent political and security body in the south, and expressed hope for recognition from the government and Saudi-led coalition.

Southern Transitional Council

He was fired on 27 April 2017 by President Hadi. On May 3, major rallies were held in Aden to protest the decision of Hadi.
One week later, the Southern Transitional Council was formed; some of the members were the governors of Dhale Governorate, Shabwah Governorate, Hadramaut Governorate, Lahij Governorate, Socotra, and Al Mahrah Governorate. Al-Zoubaidi became a member of the Southern Movement and President of the Southern Transitional Council.
On 29 January 2018, in the Battle of Aden, al-Zoubaidi announced a state of emergency in Aden and that "the STC has begun the process of overthrowing Hadi's rule over the South". In April 2020, the STC announced self-rule in southern Yemen.
On 7 January 2026, Rashad al-Alimi announced that al-Zoubaidi was dismissed from the Presidential Leadership Council. He stated that al-Zoubaidi had committed treason and ordered an investigation. Simultaneously, al-Zoubaidi was reported to have been absent from peace negotiations in Riyadh concerning the Yemeni civil war. The PLC accused al-Zoubaidi of fleeing instead to Dhale Governorate with a "large number" of STC forces, although the STC said al-Zoubaidi was still in Aden. The Saudi-led coalition in Yemen later said that al-Zoubaidi travelled to Berbera by boat and boarded a plane before he flew to Abu Dhabi via Mogadishu.