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Authorities in Yemen's Aden ban qat markets on weekdays

Markets selling mild stimulant blamed for causing traffic jams, with checkpoints set up to prevent shipments entering port city
A market in Aden. Sales of qat have been blamed for causing traffic jams in the city (AFP)

Authorities in south Yemen have banned the sale of the mild narcotic qat on working days, allowing it into the city of Aden only on weekends, witnesses told the AFP news agency on Monday.

Checkpoints have been set up around Aden to stop qat shipments from entering the port city, as patrols roamed markets to enforce the ban on sales, the witnesses said.

Security forces said in a statement that they had decided to "ban the sale of qat in Aden and its suburbs during the week".

The statement said the ban was prompted by complaints from citizens and due to "security, social and health" concerns, adding that qat markets caused traffic jams.

Aden has served as the temporary capital of Yemen since forces loyal to exiled President Abd Rabbuh Hadi recaptured it and four other southern provinces from the Houthis in the summer.

Southern militias that fought alongside Hadi's loyalists have been mostly assimilated in to the security forces.

Chewing wads of the evergreen herb has a stimulant effect similar to drinking numerous cups of strong coffee, and it is part of the social fabric of Yemen.

This restriction on qat consumption was applied in the formerly independent south Yemen, before it united with the north in the 1990s. 

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