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Arabia
Yemen forces fire on Sanaa protest march, 10 hurt
2011-04-18
[Pak Daily Times] Yemeni forces loyal to President President-for-Life Ali Abdullah Saleh
... Saleh initially took power as a strongman of North Yemen in 1977, when disco was in flower, after serving as a lieutenant colonel in the army. He had been part of the conspiracy that bumped off his predecessor, Ibrahim al-Hamdi, in the usual tiresome military coup, and he has maintained power by keeping Yemen's many tribes fighting with each other, rather than uniting to string him up. ...
fired at a protest march in Sanaa on Sunday, wounding at least 10 people, doctors said, heightening tension as opposition leaders prepared to meet Gulf Arab mediators.

Doctors said around 200 more demonstrators were overcome by teargas when they marched outside their normal protest zone in the streets near Sanaa University, a hub of pro-democracy demonstrations that have lasted three months.

"We neared the Sanaa Trade Centre when police confronted us with teargas, and suddenly opened heavy gunfire on us from all directions," said Sabry Mohammed, a protester. "A state of terror set in among the demonstrators, and some of them decamped into side streets."

Both Western and Gulf Arab allies have tried without success so far to broker a resolution to a crisis over a transition of power from Saleh, who has led the Arabian Peninsula state for 32 years and says he wants a handover, but only to "safe hands".

Saudi and Western allies of Yemen fear a prolonged standoff could ignite festivities between rival military units and cause chaos that would benefit an active al Qaeda wing operating in the poor, mountainous country.

Hundreds of security forces deployed across the area near where the festivities took place on Algeria Street in Sanaa, roughly 2 kilometre outside the normal protest zone. Some were on foot while others were in armoured vehicles.

The maimed were rushed to hospital by ambulance and private car, and tear gas canisters littered the road. A protest official told anti-Saleh crowds over a loudspeaker that dozens of protesters had been tossed in the slammer by a nearby mosque.

Clashes also were reported to have taken place in Dhamar, just south of the capital.

A political survivor who has described governing Yemen as akin to "dancing on the heads of snakes", Saleh has warned of civil war and the break-up of the country if he is forced out.

More than 116 protesters have been killed in festivities with security forces since late January.

Gulf Arab states stepped in this month with an offer to mediate after Western-brokered talks stalled, and an opposition delegation was due to meet Gulf foreign ministers in Riyadh shortly to lay out conditions for entering formal talks. The opposition, whose delegation is headed by former foreign minister Mohammed Basindwa, rejected a Gulf framework for talks last week, saying it wanted Saleh out within two weeks and the Gulf plan did not include a quick or clear transition timetable.

Basindwa told journalists the opposition had agreed to meet at the invitation of Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al Faisal and on condition no Saleh representatives would be included.

Saleh stepping down was "not negotiable", Basindwa said.

"We hope the American and European friends as well as our brothers in the Gulf will support this initiative because there will be no solution without Saleh's departure."

Saleh had welcomed the Gulf plan, which appeared to promise him immunity from prosecution, an issue that had proved a stumbling block in earlier talks that stalled. Saleh accepted the Gulf talks framework the next day.

The opposition wants to keep open the option of prosecuting him but has indicated that issue alone would not thwart a deal. After initially offering to leave after his current term ends in 2013, Saleh subsequently said he would step down after holding elections, possibly this year.

Even before the start of the protests, inspired by the toppling of the Tunisian and Egyptian presidents, Saleh was struggling to quell a separatist rebellion in the south and cement a truce with Mohammedan rebels in the north.
Posted by:Fred

#1  Has the green turban guy with the sword emigrated to Yemen?

There is a striking resemblance...

Fred you aren't using stock footage again are you?
Posted by: Bill Clinton   2011-04-18 12:32  

00:00