By Ahmed Al Haj
SANAA: Yemeni police trying to disperse thousands of anti-government protesters in two cities Thursday killed two and wounded at least 47, some by gunfire, according to witnesses. In one of the cities, protesters overran a government building. Gunmen fired at protesters in the central city of Bayda from the roof of a building belonging to the ruling party, killing two people and injuring seven, activist Ghazi al-Amiri said. In the southern city of Taiz, police fired live ammunition and rubber bullets to disperse demonstrators there, injuring 40 people, said field doctor Sadeq al-Shujah. Taiz has been a hotbed of anti-government protests. Activist Nouh al-Wafi said crowds seized control of the oil ministry building and hung a banner over the entrance Thursday that said “Closed until further notice by order of the youth revolution.”
Bushra al-Maktari, an activist in Taiz, said police fired tear gas at the demonstrators, and the government sent army and security reinforcements to confront thousands camped in the city’s central square. Demonstrations took place in Aden, Hadramawt, Hodeida and other cities. Protesters have been demanding the resignation of longtime President Ali Abdullah Saleh in weeks of demonstrations, some involving tens of thousands of people. Saleh has been clinging to power, warning that if he leaves without an orderly succession, the Al-Qaeda branch in Yemen will take advantage of the resulting chaos. Saleh torpedoed a mediation effort last month that appeared to be close to resolving the crisis. Yemen’s powerful neighbors in the Gulf Cooperation Council put together a package that offered Saleh to name his own successor, avoid prosecution and step down in 30 days.
Opposition leaders grudgingly accepted it, but at the last minute, Saleh refused to sign. The Gulf Cooperation Council tried to resurrect the deal Thursday. “The Gulf initiative is the best solution and an exit out of the country’s dramatic situation to stop the bloodshed and to spare the country further deterioration of the security and political division,” GCC Secretary-General Abdullatif bin Rashid al-Zayani said in a statement Thursday. Media reports said Zayani was expected to visit Yemen Saturday to press the initiative. The U.S. State Department offered its support Thursday for the GCC agreement and demanded that in the meantime, Yemen’s government stop firing on protesters.
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