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Yemen Follows Tunisia's Lead: Thousands Demand Ouster Of President Ali Abdullah Saleh

AHMED AL-HAJ   01/22/11 07:07 PM ET   AP

Yemen President

ADEN, Yemen — Drawing inspiration from the revolt in Tunisia, thousands of Yemenis fed up with their president's 32-year rule demanded his ouster Saturday in a noisy demonstration that appeared to be the first large-scale public challenge to the strongman.

Clashes also broke out Saturday in Algeria, as opposition activists there tried to copy the tactics of their Tunisian neighbors, who forced their longtime leader to flee the country more than a week ago.

The protests in Yemen appeared to be the first of their kind. The nation's 23 million citizens have many grievances: they are the poorest people in the Arab world, the government is widely seen as corrupt and is reviled for its alliance with the United States in fighting al-Qaida, there are few political freedoms and the country is rapidly running out of water.

Still, calling for President Ali Abdullah Saleh to step down had been a red line that few dissenters dared to test.

In a reflection of the tight grip Saleh's government and its forces have in the capital – outside the city, that control thins dramatically – Saturday's demonstration did not take place in the streets, but was confined to the grounds of the University of Sanaa.

Around 2,500 students, activists and opposition groups gathered there and chanted slogans against the president, comparing him to Tunisia's ousted President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, whose people were similarly enraged by economic woes and government corruption.

"Get out get out, Ali. Join your friend Ben Ali," the crowds chanted.

One of the organizers, Fouad Dahaba, said the demonstration was only a beginning and they will not stop until their demands are met.

"We will march the streets of Sanaa, to the heart of Sanaa and to the presidential palace. The coming days will witness an escalation," said Dahaba, an Islamist lawmaker and head of the teachers' union.

Making good on that pledge will be difficult. Like other entrenched regimes in the Arab world, Yemen's government shows little tolerance for dissent and the security forces – bolstered by U.S. military aid intended for fighting the country's virulent al-Qaida offshoot – are quick to crack down.

Police fired tear gas at the demonstrators, whose grievances include proposed constitutional changes that would allow the president to rule for a lifetime. Around 30 protesters were detained, a security official said. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the press.

Since the Tunisian turmoil, Saleh has ordered income taxes slashed in half and has instructed his government to control prices. He also ordered a heavy deployment of anti-riot police and soldiers to several key areas in the capital and its surroundings to prevent any riots.

Nearly half the population lives below the poverty line of $2 a day and doesn't have access to proper sanitation. Less than a tenth of the roads are paved. Tens of thousands have been displaced from their homes by conflict, flooding the cities.

The government is riddled with corruption, has little control outside the capital, and its main source of income – oil – could run dry in a decade.

Protests were also held in the southern port city of Aden, where calls for Saleh to step down were heard along with the more familiar slogans for southern secession. Police fired on demonstrators, injuring four, and detained 22 others in heavy clashes.

Military forces responded harshly to two similar protests a day earlier in four cities in the nearby southern province of Lahj, even firing mortar shells that killed one woman. The response forced residents to flee.

Besides the battle with al-Qaida's local franchise, which has taken root in the country's remote and lawless mountains, Yemen's government is also trying to suppress the secessionist movement and a separate on-and-off rebellion in the north.

Adding popular street unrest to that mix could present the government with a new challenge, though it has shown itself to be resilient even to the occasional al-Qaida attacks to penetrate the capital's defenses.

In Algeria, meanwhile, helmeted riot police armed with batons and shields clashed with rock- and chair-throwing protesters who tried to march in the capital in defiance of a ban on public gatherings.

At least 19 people were injured, the government said, but an opposition party official put the figure at more than 40.

Protest organizers at the democratic opposition party RCD draped a Tunisian flag next to the Algerian flag on a balcony of the party headquarters where the march was to begin in the capital, Algiers.

Riot police, backed by a helicopter and crowd-control trucks, ringed the exit to ensure marchers couldn't leave the building – and striking those who tried to come out to take part. Outside, some young men waved the national flag and chanted "Assassin Power!"

"I am a prisoner in the party's headquarters," said Said Sadi, a former presidential candidate who leads the Rally for Culture and Democracy party, said through a megaphone from a balcony window.

___

Aomar Ouali contributed to this report from Algiers, Algeria.

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ADEN, Yemen — Drawing inspiration from the revolt in Tunisia, thousands of Yemenis fed up with their president's 32-year rule demanded his ouster Saturday in a noisy demonstration that appeared to b...
ADEN, Yemen — Drawing inspiration from the revolt in Tunisia, thousands of Yemenis fed up with their president's 32-year rule demanded his ouster Saturday in a noisy demonstration that appeared to b...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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Khirad 11:04 PM on 01/23/2011
We still don't know how Tunisia will end up, lots of factors could play out. But there is some room for optimism with the continued demonstrations against the ruling party, never mind questions about how much support al-Nadha really garners.

I haven't been following the couple Yemeni protests like I have Tunisia for the past month, but something tells me the prognosis of toppling Saleh portends  Read More...
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11:39 AM on 01/24/2011
obama's drone attacks not helping?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
drricklippin
physician-activist-poet
11:20 AM on 01/24/2011
We may be witnessing a worldwide tripartite "fracture line" that involves the embracing of secular/modernism against embracing religious fundamentalism against embracing personal spirituality- the latter being a relatively small upper middle class phenomenon compared to the other two.

Stay tuned!

Dr. Rick Lippin
Southampton, Pa
11:10 AM on 01/24/2011
The other day I watched Yemen TV and saw Pres Salah address his military and he said good morning. Muslims offer As salaamu Alaykum to other Muslims. But, there was no surprises since Pres salah is considered an apostate and heavily supported by the US.

Yemen is a conservative and strong Muslim country but the gov is not! The traditional Arab Kabile (clans) still control much of Yemen and they too are very strongly Islamic.

Yemen differs greatly in many respects from Tunisia since Tunisia has wiped out the Islamic tenets, closed up and not allowing the adhan (call to prayer) from being played.

This is not the problem in Yemen, since there is an active and powerful ulama and Islamic tenets and dress is very evident.

Yemen sports a Shi'ah insurgencies in the North and Sunni Mujahideen in the south. There is no or very little middle class, you have the very rich and the extremely poor.

Accordingly, Pres Salah has allowed Islamic to flourish but has weaken on the urging of the US, and introduced secular ways and means to counter Islam. now, there is drugs, whoredom and other vices visible in Sana'a.

Pres Salah was warned two years ago by the Ulama to stamp out the whoredom and drugs or suffer the consequences of a fatwa urging his ouster. Al Qaeda of the Jazeera has beat them to the punch by openly threatening the life of Pres salah for his apostate gov and alliance with the US.
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07:40 AM on 01/26/2011
It is always interesting to get first hand infos. But that can be confusing; is Khat not considered a drug? I thought that has been used in decades, if not centuries in the area.
09:48 AM on 01/26/2011
True, but the appearance of harder drugs that are infamous in the west have made their way to Yemen, these are the drugs I am speaking of.
11:14 PM on 01/23/2011
Hey Hillary, another one of your corrupt buddies might be about to bite the dust. Can you twitt us on that?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gloria Otting Vestring
graphic art and design
02:22 PM on 02/13/2011
Hillary inherited her "buddies" from Condoliza Rice...... famous for waving as she ascended and descended flights. No words from her either at the time.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Khirad
11:04 PM on 01/23/2011
We still don't know how Tunisia will end up, lots of factors could play out. But there is some room for optimism with the continued demonstrations against the ruling party, never mind questions about how much support al-Nadha really garners.

I haven't been following the couple Yemeni protests like I have Tunisia for the past month, but something tells me the prognosis of toppling Saleh portends another full-fledged trilateral civil war, and looks more bleak.
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jeanrenoir
09:42 PM on 01/23/2011
What exactly are Israel and America going to do when Egypt and Saudi Arabia become replays of the Iranian Revolution, fulfilling Al Qaeda's central political dream? Israel looks more and more like Custer at the Little Big Horn. Or Gordon of Khartoum. Israel has the great fire power, including all those nukes, but what good will it all be when the hordes are endlessly willing to die and will not stop coming?
10:06 PM on 01/23/2011
Egypt is a relatively sophisticated society with respected leaders. It won't turn into Al Qaeda central, and Saudi Arabia would likely end up in a sectarian war, and possibly split than become al Qaeda central.
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12:15 AM on 01/24/2011
jean, you should at least put the iranian revolution in context. american and britain financed and promoted the ouster of the king because he wanted to nationalise what is now known as BP within iran's borders. of course the british would have none of that from some former colonial subject. so what will america do? hopefully mind their own damn bizness!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Doctoress
02:23 AM on 01/24/2011
R Z, I did not think there were still some iranians who believed in this lie. Educate yourself if you are a young person. If you belong to the older generation of exiles, forget it, there is no hope for your enlightenment.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
MissMapleLeaf
princesshighandmightytoldyousobossoftheworld
09:40 PM on 01/23/2011
Nature abhors a vacuum. If one government is ousted, then what takes its place? Just because the populace is peeved doesn't mean the replacement government is any better. For every America, there many more Somalias.
09:09 PM on 01/23/2011
In some ways< I will this were YOU doing the same for congress and your corrupt courts.

You might learn something from this.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jtgun
Fall mountains , just don't fall on me .
09:08 PM on 01/23/2011
God bless George Bush for introducing the concept of democracy to that region .
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
MissMapleLeaf
princesshighandmightytoldyousobossoftheworld
09:25 PM on 01/23/2011
'weren't him, luv. ;-) The concept has been floating around for a while in that area.
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jeanrenoir
09:49 PM on 01/23/2011
Another naive idiocy of Bush's. Hard to believe that it was ever anything but cant for his neocon puppeteers, who surely must have realized that if the Arab and Muslim mobs were ever actually allowed to vote their consciences, they would install governments that hate America and Israel just as much as the democratically elected Hamas does in Gaza. Preaching "democracy" in the Middle East is like Custer preaching that all the plains Indians should be allowed to vote on whether or not whites should settle the West. Imperialists should not be preaching "democracy." It's a bit counterproductive to go there. At least the CIA was consistent and logical about America's interests during the Cold War in backing endless dictatorships against the Red Menace of the mob.
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Gloria Otting Vestring
graphic art and design
02:27 PM on 02/13/2011
Well said. F&F.
09:03 PM on 01/23/2011
Yemen is one of the most threatening places in the world. It's poverty and lack of water make it a rich recruiting ground for al Qaeda and the resulting spread of terrorism around the world.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jeanrenoir
09:50 PM on 01/23/2011
There's plenty of poverty, and lots more potential Al Qaeda hordes, in Egypt and Saudi Arabia than in little Yemen or Somalia. The latter are just portents of the fire to come when the masses take over Egypt and Saudi Arabia the way they took over the Shah's Iran.
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01:27 AM on 01/24/2011
The military approach by the US makes it worse.
06:18 AM on 01/24/2011
The US military is not in Yemen.

Unfortunately terrorists don't accept invitations to negotiating tables.

And, by the way, don't ever underestimate the end goals of the MB.
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Quinterius
Accept no dogmas
08:29 PM on 01/23/2011
This article is a little behind the times. Saleh actually promised to resign in 2013. However, nobody should take him for his word. He has to go now.
07:51 PM on 01/23/2011
"....Yemen's government shows little tolerance for dissent and the security forces – bolstered by U.S. military aid intended for fighting the country's virulent al-Qaida offshoot – are quick to crack down." And Americans wonder why the US is hated by the poor and downtrodden in Yemen, Egypt, etc.
09:06 PM on 01/23/2011
Americans would wonder why the US did nothing, if Yemen were left alone to grow as one of the world's most troublesome areas and rich recruiting ground for terrorists to create havoc and damage around the world.
09:11 PM on 01/23/2011
Your sign in name tells it all. You have not gotten out of your high chair. You probably have not even been our of the county where you live, and know nothing of the USA acts in other countries.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Khirad
11:07 PM on 01/23/2011
It's a foreign policy Catch-22, no?
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namewithheld
Sorry, your micro-bio did not meet our guidelines.
07:42 PM on 01/23/2011
Funny. Despite her best attempts, Hellary Clinton might actually bring democracy to the Middle East.
09:07 PM on 01/23/2011
Dream on. Hillary Clinton has nothing to do with the mayhem in Middle East.
09:11 PM on 01/23/2011
But the USA for oil, surely does.
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namewithheld
Sorry, your micro-bio did not meet our guidelines.
07:49 AM on 01/24/2011
I realize that. That's why I said "Despite her best attempts...." She has done nothing except maintain the status quo relationships with our favorite dictators.
07:30 PM on 01/23/2011
Good, I think.
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will357
Active Duty Navy
07:27 PM on 01/23/2011
Get it out! Get out now.....we need to focus on our own infrastucture, schools, arts, technology etc. The barbarians are not at the gates we have oceans separating us...so no more of the fighting them over there so we don't have to here crap...just saying.
09:11 PM on 01/23/2011
Oceans separated the US from Afghanistan on 9/11.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
will357
Active Duty Navy
08:12 PM on 01/27/2011
Ok, well you sign up for service as I am currently doing. As I have also served overseas and know you can't believe everything you see or read even on HuffPo......just saying.