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Issue 489 -- 11th - 17th June 2011

Front Page

Somaliland News

News Headlines

Committee Advises Government To Allow More Parties

Netherlands: Stability And Good Governance In Somaliland Vital In Combating Piracy

Local and Regional Affairs

Somalia Extends Government; Premier Fired

Dutch Minister Sees Ethiopia's Potential

Somalia: A Refugee Crisis Without End

Ophir Energy Looks To Raise $400 Mln In London IPO

Could A 36-Year Drought Push Somalia Over The Edge?

Maritime Piracy And Somalia's Global Canker

Report Warns Of Torture By Somali Pirates

Editorial

Yemen And The Paradox Of Power In Divided Societies

Features & Commentary

Somaliland: Postelection Report

Somaliland Representative For US Mr. Rashid Nur’s Speech In Columbus

Terror On The Seas: Somalia’s Piracy Plague

How Al Shabaab Recruitment Agents Lure Kenyans To Somalia

Eyes In The Sky: Up Close As The German Navy Tracks Down Somali Pirates

International News

Opinion

Pakistan: A Hireling Government In The Dark

Pandering To Stereotypes: iLive

18 May, The Good Decision Day

 

More Unrest In Yemen Over Saleh's Future Role

By Mohammed Ghobari

Sana’a, Yemen, June 11, 2011 – Tens of thousands of Yemenis took to the streets of the capital yesterday in parallel protests - one demanding the country's wounded leader surrender any claim to power, another calling for his return.

The rival demonstrations over the fate of president Ali Abdullah Saleh, forced abroad for surgery after an attack on his palace a week ago, highlighted the volatility of a country which western nations and neighboring Saudi Arabia fear could slip in to chaos and give al-Qaeda a regional foothold.

Thousands of anti-Saleh demonstrators filled Siteen Street in the heart of the capital, Sanaa, demanding Mr Saleh formally hand over power to his deputy, Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, the acting president.

Near the presidential headquarters, a smaller group of Saleh supporters gathered after Friday prayers to urge his return to a country wracked by months of demonstrations demanding his removal amid a violent crackdown.

Mr Saleh, Yemen's ruler for three decades, has not been seen in public since being flown to Saudi for surgery after last Friday's mortar attack on his palace.

US officials have said Mr Saleh, 69, suffered 40 per cent burns to his body, making it unlikely he will return anytime soon. 

But after months of factional violence and pro-democracy protests, he has resisted western and Arab pressure to step down.

A ceasefire has held in Sanaa since Mr Saleh left. More than 200 people have died and thousands have fled in the past fortnight as his troops clashed with forces loyal to tribal leader Sheikh Sadeq al-Ahmar. Opposition parties have told Mr Saleh's ruling General People's Congress party they would form a provisional government if he doesn't quit within a week.

Source: The Scotsman



 





 


 



 



 

 


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