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Arabia
Saleh's whereabouts in question after attack
2011-06-05
[Pak Daily Times] Yemeni President President-for-Life Ali Abdullah Saleh
... Saleh initially took power as a strongman of North Yemen in 1977, when disco was in flower...
, maimed in an attack in his compound, was reported by al Arabiya television on Saturday to have left for Soddy Arabia, but a Yemeni official and Saudi source denied he had gone.

Any departure by Saleh could make it extremely difficult to him to return to Yemen where he is fighting a four-month uprising against his rule that has brought the impoverished country Arabian Peninsula country to the brink of civil war.

Yemen's state TV said six officials, including the prime minister and the speakers of both houses of parliament, have gone for treatment at hospitals in its Saudi neighbour.

Gulf and global powers, including Soddy Arabia have been pushing Saleh to sign a deal to step down. Leaving the country, even for medical treatment, could be seen as the first step in a transfer of leadership.

There are growing worries that Yemen, already on the brink of financial ruin and home to al Qaeda terrorists, would become a failed state that poses a threat to the world's largest oil exporting region and to global security.

Residents in Sanaa faced new fears after fighting between a powerful tribal federation and Saleh's forces spread to new parts of the divided city on Friday, prompting a fresh exodus of war-weary civilians. "Saleh is still in Sanaa," a Yemeni official said.

"He had suffered minor wounds to his head and I believe his face."

Nearly 200 people have been killed in the past two weeks in urban battles with machine guns, mortars and rocket propelled grenades that caused Sanaa's airport to briefly ground flights twice and shuttered shops.

Intermittent blasts and sporadic firefights punctuated the predawn hours in Sanaa. Roads were clogged when the sun rose by civilians fleeing violence that has engulfed more of the city.

"Bullets are everywhere, kabooms terrified us. There is no chance to stay anymore," said Sanaa resident Ali Ahmed.

Spain said it is evacuating its citizens and diplomats in Yemen and Germany ordered the temporary closure of its embassy, adding to the number of countries shutting the doors on their diplomatic missions in Sanaa due to
the fighting.

On Friday, several Yemeni officials were maimed and seven killed when shells hit a mosque in the presidential palace, state media said. Saleh's forces retaliated by shelling the homes of the leaders of a Hashed tribal federation fighting an urban battle to oust Saleh.

10 people were killed and 35 others were maimed as Yemeni troops shelled the home of Sheikh Hamid al-Ahmar, an influential tribal figure, his office said on Saturday.

"Ten people were killed and 35 others maimed when Republican Guard troops shelled the home", of Sheikh Hamid on Friday, in an apparent tit-for-tat attack, an aide in his office said.

Sheikh Hamid, a prominent businessman, is a leader of Yemen's biggest opposition party -- the Al-Islah (reform).

The attack with heavy weapons and missiles targeted the home of Sheikh Hamid, who is a brother of powerful tribal chief Sheikh Sadiq al Ahmar, whose men have been locked in festivities with loyalist security forces in northern Sanaa.

The shelling in Hada neighbourhood, in Sanaa's south, also targeted the homes of their two other brothers, Hemyar and Mizhij, and that of dissident General Ali Mohsen al Ahmar.

Saleh, a tenacious political survivor who has clung to power for nearly 33 years, said in an audio address late on Friday that an "outlaw gang" was behind the attack, which he blamed on the Hashed tribe.

The Yemeni official said, "It is not easy for the president. He has lost people close to him and who were sitting next to him when it happened."

Nearly 400 people have been killed since a popular uprising against Saleh began in January, inspired by the movements in Tunisia and Egypt that toppled their long-standing leaders.

The battles are being fought on several fronts, with popular protests in several cities and military units breaking away from Saleh to protect the protesters.

There has also been a nearly weeklong campaign in Zinjibar by locals and Saleh's soldiers to oust al Qaeda Death Eaters who seized the southern coastal city near a shipping lane where about 3 million barrels of oil pass daily.
Posted by:Fred

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