As NDC representatives assigned to the southern dossier are waiting to return to the negotiating table and resolve Yemen's most contentious issue, Haraki leaders (Southern Secessionist Movement) seem little preoccupied with national cohesion and unity as they are clamoring for secession and independence, intent on reclaiming their old flag.
Two days after Aden's grand demonstration, Hassan Baoum, a senior Haraki leader and prominent politician traveled to Mukalla, the regional capital of Hadhramawt, where he called on supporters to organize this Thursday yet another march in the name of secession.
The march will also aim to commemorate the death of Mohammed Fadl Jabbar, who was assassinated on the second day of the Holy month of Ramadan 2012.
Haraki militants have confirmed that further civil disobedience movements will be organized throughout the southern provinces as to signal Sana'a of the movement's determination to see their demands fulfilled.
While the Southern Movement has remained true to its peaceful principles, officials in Sana'a are quickly losing patience as negotiations are going no where fast.
Seemingly undeterred by the political hold-up President Abdo Rabbo Hadi has called this Tuesday on all parties to renewed their efforts in finding a consensus on all issues as to secure Yemen a secure and stable political and institutional future.
Speaking on the NDC 20 and 11-points proposals, President Hadi noted, "The goal of these points is not to be implemented, but to build a new Yemen meets the aspirations of the people of a modern civil state based on good governance, justice, freedom, equality, peaceful power transfer and respect of the people's will."