Aden: Yemeni President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi led a meeting of governors in the southern city of Aden on Sunday as he resumed some of his duties after escaping house arrest in the capital.

The Western-backed leader fled to Aden on Saturday after sneaking out of his residence in Sana’a, where he was being held by a militia group that has seized control of the capital.

The militiamen, known as Al Houthis, have installed a “presidential” council to replace Hadi, who after his escape declared all their measures “null and illegitimate”.

Hadi tendered his resignation last month under pressure from the Al Houthis, but it was never approved by parliament.

On Sunday, he received the governors of various southern Yemeni provinces, Aden governor Abdul Aziz Bin Habtoor said.

“The president will keep up his political efforts to lead from Aden,” Bin Habtoor told reporters after the meeting, which was also attended by army and security chiefs.

“His priority is to normalise the security situation in Aden in order to receive foreign delegates who have requested appointments to meet him,” he said.

Aden is jointly controlled by troops loyal to Hadi and allied local militia known as the Popular Committees.

Southern Yemen is friendly territory for Hadi, himself a southerner, and local leaders have refused to recognise the authority of the council formed by Al Houthis.

An aide to Hadi said the president used the meeting to call for restarting a political transition process that stalled after Al Houthis overran Sana’a in September.

“He underlined the need to implement the recommendations of the national dialogue” which include turning the republic into a federation of six regions, the aide said.

Al Houthis, who hail from the northern Saada province where they fought the central government for a decade, have rejected the proposed division of regions in the federation plan.

The president called on Saturday for the national commission overseeing the drafting of a new constitution to again convene, saying it should meet in Aden or Taez province until Sana’a “returns as a safe capital for all Yemenis”.

By escaping house arrest, “Hadi has regained the political initiative and stripped Al Houthis of legitimacy,” said analyst Fahd Sultan of the Yemeni Political Reform organisation.

Talks sponsored by UN envoy Jamal Bin Omar in Sana’a to end the political deadlock stalled on Saturday following Hadi’s escape, but were expected to resume late on Sunday.

Bin Omar had announced on Thursday a “breakthrough” in talks as parties, including Al Houthis, agreed on the “form of the legislative authority in the interim period.”

But the pan-Arab Nasserist party said such discussions are “no longer useful” and invited Hadi to “assumes his duties as a head of state.”

Powerful tribes in the oil-rich province of Marib, east of Sana’a, went further, urging Hadi to declare Aden a “temporary capital of Yemen until Sana’a is liberated.”

“Hadi’s exit has turned the table on all parties, especially those involved in talks,” said political analyst Majed Al Modhaji.

It also “marks a change in the balance of power in favour of the state and at the expense of Al Houthis,” according to Ebrahim Sharqieh, from the Brookings Institution in Doha.

He said that Hadi, elected by some seven million voters on February 21, 2012, “continues to represent the legitimate authority at home and internationally.”

The Al Houthis last month seized the presidential palace and besieged Hadi’s residence, prompting him to offer his resignation.

They have pushed their advance south and west into mainly Sunni areas of Yemen, where they have met with fierce resistance from tribesmen and Al Qaida.

The crisis has raised fears of Yemen — a key US ally in the fight against Al Qaida that borders Saudi Arabia — collapsing into a failed state.