SAT 27 - 4 - 2024
 
Date: Apr 2, 2011
Source: The Daily Star
Saleh defiant at loyalist rally as separate protest demands he step down

Saturday, April 02, 2011
Mohamed Sudam and Mohammed Ghobari
Reuters

 

SANAA: Embattled Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh told a huge rally of supporters Friday that he would sacrifice everything for his country, suggesting he has no plans to step down yet.
Tens of thousands, both for and against Saleh, took to the streets of the capital Sanaa, as negotiators struggle to revive talks to decide his fate.
“I swear to you I will sacrifice blood and soul and everything precio

us for the sake of this great people,” he told supporters shouting “the people want Ali Abdullah Saleh.”
Saleh has lost support from tribal, military and political backers.


Protests Friday reached the thousands in provincial capitals from Taiz, 200 kilometers south of Sanaa, to the southern port city of Aden, once capital of an independent south before Saleh united it with the north.
“Saleh is going down with the ship,” said Theodore Karasik, security analyst at the Dubai-based INEGMA group. “The only way he’ll let himself get dislodged is if he loses even more supporters from his inner circle.
“It seems like he’s not ready to go. He’s making statements saying he’s going to do what’s best for Yemen but really this is Saleh trying to do what’s best for Saleh.”


Helicopters buzzed over the protests in Sanaa. “Out traitor, the Yemeni people are in revolt. We, the army and the police are united under oppression,” the crowds of anti-Saleh protesters shouted outside Sanaa University.
One preacher said during morning prayers at the rally: “I say to you, Saleh, while you sit terrified in your palace, the people are on to your tricks … You [protesters] represent the oppressed, the poor and the imprisoned.”


Tensions were high as equally large crowds came out in a show of support for Saleh in Sabyeen Square.
That protest ended quietly as anti-Saleh protesters continued their sit-in near the university.
Hundreds of security forces deployed at checkpoints across the city as tanks rolled through the streets.

 

Anti-Saleh protesters named the day a “Friday of enough” while loyalists branded it a “Friday of brotherhood.”
“We send a message from the Yemeni majority to them [the opposition] and the whole world … of our support for the nation and for our leader,” former Prime Minister Ali Mohammed Megawar said at the pro-Saleh rally.


Some Sanaa residents said they were paid to join protests. Government officials denied the ruling party had given any money to demonstrators, calling it an attempt by the opposition to diminish the significance of the large crowds they had drawn.


Saleh is looking to stay on as president while new parliamentary and presidential elections are organized by the end of the year, an opposition source told Reuters Tuesday.


Talks over his exit have stalled and Saudi authorities have deflected Yemeni government efforts to involve them in mediation.
Rallies ended peacefully Friday, but they could easily spiral into violence in the turbulent state on the southern rim of the Arabian Peninsula.


More than half the population of 23 million own a gun. Some 82 people have been killed so far, including 52 shot by snipers on March 18.
Rows can often turn to bloodshed, from tribal clashes over dwindling water resources to army skirmishes with separatist militants in the south.


Armed tribesmen kidnapped two soldiers and wounded another in the southern town of Lawdar Friday.
Residents said the tribesmen took the hostages to win concessions from the government after the army killed 5 fellow tribesmen and claimed they were from Al-Qaeda – charges the tribe said were false.


Saleh has talked of civil war if he steps down without ensuring power passes to “safe hands” and has warned against a coup after senior generals turned against him in the past week.
Opposition parties say they can handle the militant issue better than Saleh, who they say has made deals with militants in the past to avoid provoking Yemen’s Islamists.



 
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