South Yemen: A Single Historical and Legal Entity That Cannot Be Divided

5 min read
South Yemen unity legal status

South Yemen’s unity is deeply rooted in its modern political history. From the establishment of the People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen (PDRY) in 1967 until unification in 1990, the South existed as a recognized state with clearly defined borders and a centralized administration. Its governorates—Aden, Hadhramaut, Shabwa, Al-Mahrah, Lahj, Abyan, and Al-Dhalea—were governed as integral parts of one sovereign entity, not as separate or competing regions.
This shared historical experience forged a common political identity that cannot be erased by later conflicts or imposed narratives.

Legal Reality and International Precedent

From a legal perspective, South Yemen entered the 1990 unity agreement as a sovereign state, not as disparate territories. The failure of that unity—marked by war, marginalization, and the collapse of agreed political arrangements—does not dissolve the South’s original legal coherence.
International law recognizes that when unity agreements collapse, the original entities retain their legal and political character. Attempts to isolate specific southern regions or promote alternative administrative arrangements contradict this legal continuity.

The Dangers of Fragmentation Narratives

Calls to manage Hadhramaut, Al-Mahrah, or other southern areas outside the broader southern framework are often presented as protective or pragmatic. In reality, such narratives reproduce guardianship, external influence, and long-term division. Fragmentation weakens local governance, erodes collective representation, and exposes individual regions to manipulation rather than safeguarding their interests.

Unity as a Basis for Stability

A unified South provides the only credible foundation for political stability, economic recovery, and security. Fragmented arrangements foster competition, overlapping authorities, and conflict. By contrast, a single southern political framework enables coherent governance, equitable resource management, and effective engagement with regional and international partners.

South Yemen’s unity is not a slogan or a negotiating tactic—it is a historical fact and a legal reality. Dividing the South does not resolve Yemen’s crisis; it deepens it. Recognizing the South as one indivisible entity is essential for any durable political settlement and for restoring the rights, stability, and agency of its people. Too often, discussions about South Yemen are reduced to immediate political bargaining—focused on power-sharing arrangements, tactical compromises, or externally imposed frameworks. This narrow lens obscures a core reality: South Yemen has never been a patchwork of disconnected regions. It is a unified historical, political, and legal entity. Efforts to fragment its territories do not address the roots of the conflict; instead, they disregard established facts and fuel further instability rather than offering sustainable solutions.

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