More

Yemen Protests Draw Thousands In Tunisia Inspired Demonstrations

AP/The Huffington Post    
First Posted: 01/27/11 09:49 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:30 PM ET

SANAA, Yemen (AP) — Tens of thousands of people called for the Yemeni president's ouster in protests across the country on Thursday inspired by the popular revolt in Tunisia.

The demonstrations led by opposition members and youth activists are a significant expansion of the unrest sparked by the Tunisian uprising, which also inspired Egypt's largest protests in years. They pose a new threat to the stability of the Arab world's most impoverished nation, which has become the focus of increased Western concern about a resurgent al-Qaida branch, a northern rebellion and a secessionist movement in the south.

The largest demonstrations took place in the capital of Sanaa, where crowds in four parts of the city shut down streets and chanted slogans calling for an end to the government of President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who has been in power for nearly 32 years.

"We will not accept anything less than the president leaving," said independent parliamentarian Ahmed Hashid.

Similar anti-government protests took place in the southern provinces of Dali and Shabwa where riot police used batons to disperse the demonstrators. In al-Hudaydah province, an al-Qaida stronghold along the Red Sea coast, thousands took to the streets demanding the end of Saleh's rule.

Opposition leaders called for more demonstrations on Friday.

"We'll only be happy when we hear the words 'I understand you' from the president," Hashid said, invoking a statement issued by Tunisian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali before he fled the country.

Saleh has tried to defuse simmering tensions by raising salaries for the army and by denying opponents' claims he plans to install his son as his successor.

After the Tunisian turmoil, he ordered income taxes slashed in half and instructed his government to control prices. He deployed anti-riot police and soldiers to several key areas in Sanaa and its surroundings to prevent riots.

That hasn't stopped critics of his rule from taking to the streets in days of protests calling for him to step down, a red line that few dissenters had previously dared to cross.

Nearly half of Yemen's 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.

Saleh's current term in office expires in 2013 but proposed amendments to the constitution could let him remain in power for two additional terms of ten years.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton urged Yemen to step up security cooperation with the United States during an unannounced visit this month to shore up ties.

Following the Obama administration's pattern in Afghanistan and Pakistan, Clinton also emphasized that the United States wanted a broader relationship with Yemen beyond the fight against violent extremists. Clinton was the first U.S. secretary of state to visit Yemen in two decades.

Radicals have used the country as a base for launching attacks on the U.S. The radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, thought to be hiding in Yemen, is suspected of having inspired some of those attacks.

Clinton said the U.S. supports efforts to address the underlying causes of extremism: poverty, corruption, social inequality and political divisions that have boiled into an insurgency. She said Yemen must stop the practice of child marriage and enact reforms.

In the past five years, U.S. military assistance to Yemen has totaled about $250 million. In 2010, military and civilian aid was almost evenly split and combined for about $300 million.

Military aid to Yemen would reach $250 million in 2011 alone, U.S. officials said, and Clinton said there will be additional development aid.

Yemen has been the site of numerous anti-U.S. attacks dating back to the 2000 bombing of the USS Cole in Aden harbor, which killed 17 American sailors

Just last month, several CIA operatives were the targets of a failed bombing at a restaurant in a Sanaa suburb, and al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula was thought to be behind the attempted bombing of an American airliner landing in Detroit on Christmas Day 2009.

Al-Awlaki is thought also to have inspired the deadly 2009 shooting rampage at Fort Hood, Texas. The al-Qaida group's fighters attacked the U.S. Embassy in Sanaa twice in 2008.

With the help of U.S. money and training by elite U.S. commandos, Yemen is setting up provincial anti-terrorism units to confront al-Qaida in its heartland.

Will Yemen's president be ousted?

  • Yes

  • No

Predict it!
Top Players
Beat your friends!
Connect through Facebook or Twitter and challenge your friends

FOLLOW HUFFPOST WORLD

SANAA, Yemen (AP) — Tens of thousands of people called for the Yemeni president's ouster in protests across the country on Thursday inspired by the popular revolt in Tunisia. The demonstrations...
SANAA, Yemen (AP) — Tens of thousands of people called for the Yemeni president's ouster in protests across the country on Thursday inspired by the popular revolt in Tunisia. The demonstrations...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 285
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (7 total)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Just-a-Guy
04:18 PM on 02/03/2011
Oh...this is just fantastic!

Maybe next the Pakis will rise up and elect OBL. That would be swell.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
08:38 PM on 02/02/2011
How can American citizens honestly expect our country to support revolutions that want to overthrow regimes that are friendly to us? We have worked very hard to fight terrorism and build allies in middle eastern governments. Do they want us to be attacked again?
photo
fairwayhill
1948 Palestine belongs to the Palestinians
06:47 AM on 01/30/2011
Yesterday Tunisia. Today Egypt and Yemen. Hopefully Jordan and Saudi Arabia wiIl be next to overthrow their US supported dictatorsh­­ips.
photo
fairwayhill
1948 Palestine belongs to the Palestinians
06:46 AM on 01/30/2011
Go Yemen ! throw away the US supported dictatorsh­­­ip.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
messy
artist, writer, adventurer
12:29 PM on 01/30/2011
The US never supported the Yemeni dictatorship.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Just-a-Guy
04:17 PM on 02/03/2011
Choose what side you are on. And then go live there. ;)
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
05:49 PM on 01/29/2011
The reactions to this news seem rather negative. I for one am truly excited that to see the REAL possibility that democracy and civil rights can come to these countries! What a GOOD DAY THAT WILL BE! We're getting one step closer to the day when all peoples can be free.And were on our way there now! It's going to be a very good day indeed. Yes they're taking a HUGE risk, and its very dangerous, and it will cost them their lives if they fail. But the rewards are so worth the risk!
I pray that God keeps them safe and guides their way to victory so to they too can be free!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ManuOB1
A voice crying in the wilderness
07:41 AM on 01/29/2011
If Al Qaeda takes over these countries...
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Just-a-Guy
04:22 PM on 02/03/2011
If?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Contact1972
Honey Badger Don't Care
05:42 PM on 01/28/2011
This might bring change....but what kind.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
marijam
Independent
11:52 AM on 01/28/2011
I mean, which Arab country will be next? Iran isn't Arab, is it? Don't they consider themselves to be Persians and not Arabs? Or is that Iraq and I have it backwards?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Contact1972
Honey Badger Don't Care
05:44 PM on 01/28/2011
No youre correct...Iran is Persian.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
marijam
Independent
11:50 AM on 01/28/2011
I wonder what Arab country will be next?
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
messy
artist, writer, adventurer
12:30 PM on 01/30/2011
Hopefully, Syria, but I doubt it.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tribilin219
AND NO ONE IN JAIL YET, Why?
11:30 AM on 01/28/2011
And so it starts, We where warn to stay out of the mideast!
01:36 PM on 01/28/2011
yep we were warn but as usual we always side with the corrupt leaders
this is nothing new just look at our history in latin america if we could not control it
we bought those who would see USA involvement in the Dominican Republic, Nicaragua etc, ect.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Peter Noble 2
11:26 AM on 01/28/2011
Obama has invested time and money using this vile dictator to kill our mortal enemy. America has learned nothing from its year supporting the worst to destroy the Soviet Union. So I predict that Yemen will not go Tunisian but only because Yemen's vile dictator is playing Pinochet to Obama's Nixon.
01:37 PM on 01/28/2011
what about GWB we were in Pakistan and every where else before OBAMA
jesus
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Peter Noble 2
02:50 PM on 01/28/2011
There is NO difference that is my point.
Yes W was bad. So was Bill, so has been every single president since the rich colonials took over from the Brits. WE HAVE no choice, vote Red or Blue we get endless war and endless support for dictators.
11:16 AM on 01/28/2011
Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen, who’s next Iran? Well I can dream can’t I? When will these governments learn that people want to be treated with civility and enjoy personal freedoms? The people are tired of these tyrants.
01:20 PM on 01/28/2011
Typical American ignorance.

The US has supported Egypt's dictator for over 30 years.

It is the US that is screwing the people around over there....NOT the other way around.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
messy
artist, writer, adventurer
12:32 PM on 01/30/2011
Not really. Nasser was far worse.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Just-a-Guy
04:20 PM on 02/03/2011
Fine. How about we bail on the entire region...taking our $$$ with us.

I vote for that!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
justoverit333
make art not war
10:20 AM on 01/28/2011
Power to the People!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
William50
10:18 AM on 01/28/2011
In the USA we have a revolution every two years where you have the right to absolutely change the government. We do this with out bloodshed and with the agreement of the majority.
If you would call for violent change, not the happy masses and speeches in Washington DC, but the riots, deaths and overthrow of government. The disruption of all services in the area of the fighting and threw out the country. A large chance of religious and racial attacks to happen and a real possibility of civil war or a military action to make the streets safe again with the very same people in power, then release the dogs of war on your bubble neighborhoods and into your living rooms.
In the USA, what you have around you is because the majority has agreed to make it happen. We still have that power, you just do not understand how to use it.
I fear the outcome of the actions in Africa. Perhaps if you understood the use of power and the way it is used you to would fear what is happening. I hope, yes hope, there will be a positive change, (Germany 1930 to 1939) but what usually occurs is much darker.
Now, who are the new leaders. What other groups are going to support them? Do they have in place a way to feed and grow the economy after they take power. What are the funds they will use.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
10:40 AM on 01/28/2011
"In the USA we have a revolution every two years where you have the right to absolutely change the government­"

Beautiful rhetoric. Imagine how much different things might be if it were true.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
uansari1
09:09 PM on 01/29/2011
If that's what you call picking from among a set group of candidates that all believe in roughly the same policies and practices, then ok.
09:12 AM on 01/28/2011
Looking at the mass revolt happening around the world (U.S. soon, - hopefully) coupled with the BBC their global propaganda (self-admitted "..tool of Western 'Soft Power'"), it's painfully clear the entire world has had enough of Plutocracy/Western-style Capitalism and they want a better deal.

Those few benefitiing from global slavery and endless war obviously think all they have to do is double down on the TV propaganda and Police State/MIC brutality but it seems clear to me history is more powerful than technological and weapons advantage.

Revolution happens peacefully, or it happens violently. It's for the ruling elite to decide which way they want it. The headlines show they will increase their efforts with their trusty tools of mercenaries and blatant deception since corruption, Straussian propaganda and bribery are no longer working.

Obama still has time to be great if he chooses to give up his "Centrist" (Corporatist) allegiances before it's too late.

Will he?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:16 AM on 01/28/2011
Well said! F&F!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Peter Noble 2
11:31 AM on 01/28/2011
Well put.