by his national security team,” on the unrest, a senior administration official told AFP.
“We strongly condemn the violence and those stoking it in an effort to disrupt Yemen’s political transition,” the official said on condition of anonymity.
“We will continue to support efforts to bring about a peaceful solution.”
The rising unrest has fuelled longtime divisions in Yemen, where the government, Huthis, southern separatists, powerful Sunni tribes and the local Al-Qaeda branch are all vying for influence.
The Huthis raised the stakes on Saturday by kidnapping of Hadi´s chief of staff, Ahmed Awad bin Mubarak, in an apparent bid to extract changes to a draft constitution.
Mubarak is leading efforts to reform how Yemen is governed under a “national dialogue” set up after autocratic president Ali Abdullah Saleh was forced from power in February 2012 following a year of bloody protests inspired by the Arab Spring.
Saleh´s party released a letter on Wednesday it said the former strongman sent to Hadi a month earlier urging him to “hold early presidential and parliamentary elections to resolve the country’s crisis.” Saleh has been accused of backing the Huthis, who are from the same Zaidi sect of Islam as the ex-leader, as has Shiite-dominated Iran.
Heavy fighting erupted Monday around the presidential palace and in other parts of Sanaa, with the Huthis seizing a key army base, taking control of state media and firing on a convoy carrying the prime minister, before a ceasefire was agreed.
In a televised speech after fighting subsided, defiant militia leader Abdulmalik al-Huthi warned “all options” were open against Hadi.
Yemen’s second city Aden meanwhile shut its airport, seaport and entrances to the city due to “dangerous developments in the capital” and “attacks on the symbol of national sovereignty and constitutional legitimacy”.