http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5hQ41Q8TovxIOnn_Xv33UCRMCA
7jw?docId=CNG.4398509b6788e72075f41564ffc64188.271

 

Fighting grips Yemeni capital as Saleh orders arrests

By Jamal al-Jaberi (AFP) - 15 hours ago

SANAA - Security forces in the Yemeni capital battled heavily armed
supporters of the country's most powerful tribal leader on Thursday as
President Ali Abdullah Saleh ordered the tribesman's arrest.

The leader, Sheikh Sadiq al-Ahmar, in turn accused Saleh of dragging Yemen
into civil war, speaking after hours of clashes late on Wednesday and
overnight in which at least 24 people were killed.

Meanwhile a website linked to the defence ministry said 28 more people died
when an explosion ripped through an ammunition store belonging to the
al-Ahmar tribal opposition.

But a dissident military official whose troops are stationed in the area
denied the existence of an ammunition store in that district.

AFP could not immediately confirm the reports independently.

Amid the escalating bloodshed, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urged
all sides in Yemen "immediately to cease the violence."

"We are very troubled by the ongoing clashes," she said in Paris. "We call
on all sides immediately to cease the violence."

Washington, which has urged Saleh to quit, ordered what it termed
"non-emergency" embassy staff to leave Yemen "while commercial
transportation is available."

France added its voice to the condemnation of the violence and Saleh's
refusal to agree to a handover of power.

"We call on the authorities and the other sides in the conflict in the
capital to make the fighting cease and protect the population in areas
affected by the armed clashes," foreign ministry spokesman Romain Nadal
said.

Saleh has ordered the arrest of the powerful dissident Sheikh Sadiq and his
nine brothers, the defence ministry in Sanaa said.

"The president has ordered the arrest of the sons of Ahmar to bring them to
justice for armed rebellion," the ministry's 26sep.net  news website said.

The state news agency Saba said that in Wednesday clashes in Sanaa six
civilians including a woman were killed.

Tribal sources said that 12 soldiers from the elite Republican Guard and six
civilians and tribesmen were killed in other clashes.

The latest fighting brought to at least 68 the number killed since Monday,
according to an AFP tally based on reports from medics, the government and
tribal sources. Scores were also wounded.

The clashes have pitted loyalist security forces against clansmen from
several tribes fighting in support of Sheikh Sadiq who rallied to the
opposition in March.

The fighting that spread to the Arhab district north of the airport late on
Wednesday prompted its closure, with flights diverted to the southern city
of Aden, aviation and tribal sources said.

Airport director Naji al-Marqab insisted it was functioning normally on
Thursday, Saba reported.

Blasts echoed through Sanaa in what residents described as the fiercest
clashes since Monday.

The clashes were centred on Al-Hasaba district, where Sheikh Sadiq lives.

"I couldn't sleep until 5:00 am from the sound of shelling," one resident
there told AFP.

Meanwhile, more protesters abandoned University Square, which has been the
epicentre of anti-regime protests for months in Sanaa, amid the escalating
violence.

"If things remain this way, the youth revolt will not succeed and we will
leave the square," one protester told AFP.

But organisers of the protests have called for demonstrations on Friday,
calling it "The Friday Peaceful Revolt."

Saleh loyalists, meanwhile, called for a counter-protest under the banner
"The Friday of Law and Order."

Saleh and his opponents have for months rallied their supporters in rival
demonstrations every Friday.

The president, in power since 1978, has resisted strong diplomatic pressure
to sign up to proposals by Yemen's wealthy Gulf neighbours that would see
him leave office in return for a promise of immunity from prosecution.

Sheikh Sadiq's tribesmen have been fighting security forces since Saleh
again rejected the Gulf plan at the weekend.

Tribal loyalties run deep in Yemen, the Arab world's poorest country, which
has an estimated 60 million firearms in private hands -- roughly three for
every citizen.

Yemen has been seen as a key partner in the US "war on terror," but in
recent days Washington has stepped up its pressure for Saleh to sign up to
the Gulf plan for his departure.

On Wednesday, US President Barack Obama repeated his call for Saleh to step
aside.

Clansmen of the Arhab tribe belonging to the powerful Bakil federation of
hardline cleric Abdul Majid al-Zindani, who faces US sanctions as a
"terrorism financier," have also been fighting Saleh loyalists.

 



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