Yemen's president has offered to hold talks with separatists in the country's south, saying the state would listen to their grievances and "welcome any political demands".
Ali Abdullah Saleh's offer to engage in a dialogue came a day after he vowed to defeat the separatists and security forces raided several of their hideouts.
"The separatist flags are going to burn in the coming days and weeks," Saleh told senior military officers on Monday, according to Yemen's defense ministry.
Dialogue
On Tuesday, however, the Yemeni leader offered to talk to the secessionists.
"If there are any political demands, they are welcome. Come to dialogue," Saleh said.
"Now, we are going to form local committees to talk to these forces, if they accept dialogue," he added, stressing that "real demands" will be welcome.
"We reject the spreading of the culture of hate, racism, and regionalism," he said.
Southerners complain of economic and social discrimination at the hands of the northern-controlled Sanaa government.
Pro-independence demonstrations have increased in the south in recent months amid a worsening economic situation.
South Yemen was independent from 1967 until it united with the north in 1990.
The south seceded in 1994, sparking a short-lived civil war that ended when the south was overrun by northern troops.
PHOTO CAPTION
South Yemenis rally in the town of Daleh.
Al-Jazeera