MAY 14, 2011
Yemen's Crisis Mounts Amid Protests, Killings
By TOM FINN
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703864204576321334194576812.ht
ml?mod=WSJEUROPE_hpp_MIDDLESecondNews

SAN'A, Yemen-President Ali Abdullah Saleh rejected calls to step down Friday
as hundreds of thousands of protesters, backed by army defectors,
demonstrated in the Arab world's poorest country and security forces killed
at least three people.

Mr. Saleh's defiance came as Qatar announced it was pulling out of efforts
to mediate a solution to the crisis, blaming Yemen's president for
intransigence. Qatar is one of the members of the six-nation Gulf
Cooperation Council, which is trying to persuade Mr. Saleh to honor a prior
deal to step down.

Plain-clothes gunmen fired at protesters Saturday demonstrating against
President Ali Abdullah Saleh in the city of Taiz. Video courtesy of Reuters.

The council is fearful that Yemen's growing instability poses risks to the
region and could embolden the powerful Yemeni affiliate of al Qaeda.

View Full Image
yemen0513
Reuters

Friends at the funeral of Majed Al-Ghrghzi, 24, Friday. He was killed this
week in clashes with police in San'a.
yemen0513
yemen0513

Addressing thousands of flag-waving supporters at a Friday prayer sermon in
central San'a, Mr. Saleh described protesters as "saboteurs" and advised the
political opposition who are seeking his ouster to use the ballot box and
"stop playing with fire."

"We will defend ourselves with all our forces and by all means," he said.

Minutes after his speech, security forces fired on a throng of protesters
carrying out a burial ceremony in Ibb, a city south of San'a. A local
pediatrician said three people were killed and 29 wounded in the clash,
bringing the reported overall protest death toll in Yemen to more than 145
people, says Amnesty International.

Two miles north of where Mr. Saleh was addressing his supporters, an
estimated half a million antigovernment protesters at San'a University
staged their biggest pro-democracy rally since unrest broke out three months
ago, filling a four-mile stretch of road with tents, banners and makeshift
restaurants.

Raising the specter of a broader conflict, they protested under the watchful
eyes of soldiers and tanks sent by Maj. Gen. Ali Mohsen al-Ahmar, a former
Saleh confidant who has since joined the opposition.

On Wednesday, Major Ali Mohsen's forces clashed in San'a with the elite
Republican Guard, a force headed by the president's son. The four-hour gun
battle left at least ten protesters and one soldier dead.
Regional Upheaval

Track events day by day in the region.

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The prolonged conflict is threatening to worsen Yemen's already crippled
economy. Tribesmen blockading Yemen's oil- and gas-producing Marib province
are creating a fuel crisis that is costing the country $3 million a day in
blocked exports.

Fuel shortages mean dry parts of the country have not received water
shipments and even the capital San'a is grappling with power cuts that last
up to 10 hours a day. Food prices have skyrocketed and cooking gas
quadrupled in a country where some 40% of the population of 23 million
people live on less than $2 a day and a third face chronic hunger.

Oil and Minerals Minister Amir al-Aydarous warned on Thursday that Yemen was
on the verge of an "economic disaster,"

"If the problem persists, the government will be unable to meet the minimum
needs of the citizens. The situation will pose a catastrophe beyond
imagination," Mr. Al-Ayradous said.

Qatar's withdrawal from the initiative is the latest chapter in weeks of
steadily souring relations between Doha and San'a following a statement in
March by Qatar's prime minister, Sheikh Hamad Bin Jassim Bin Jabr al-Thani,
calling on Mr. Saleh to step down. The president responded by recalling
Yemen's ambassador to Qatar and went on to accuse the oil-rich sheikhdom and
its state-funded news channel, Al-Jazeera, of "funding chaos in Yemen,
Egypt, Syria and throughout the Arab world."

Yemen's official news agency Saba said Friday that Mr. Saleh's party accused
Qatar of siding with the protesters and welcomed its withdrawal from the
talks.

Despite Qatar's withdrawal, the other council members appear committed to
push their Yemeni transition plan, which is backed by the U.S. and the
European Union. Council secretary-general Abdullatif al-Zayani is due to
arrive in San'a on Saturday to try to resuscitate it after Mr. Saleh
suddenly refused to sign the deal last week.

The accord, which was accepted by the opposition, would see Mr. Saleh
surrender power within 30 days of signing the deal in exchange for immunity
for prosecution for himself and his relatives. It remained unclear whether
Mr. Saleh was holding out in the hope of a better deal such as a guaranteed
position in a future government or whether he intended to try and ride out
the popular demands for his resignation until his term ends in 2013. He has
only agreed to resign as leader of the ruling party.

Yemen's youthful protesters, meanwhile, have welcomed Qatar's withdrawal and
are calling on the rest of the Gulf Cooperation Council to scrap the plan,
which they say is merely letting the president buy more time.

"We call on the rest of our brothers in the Gulf to ditch this plan, which
is acting as a fig leaf for the regime and shielding it from prosecution
despite all the killings" said Adel Al-Surabi, a member of the Civil
Coalition of Revolutionary youth. 





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