CNN.com           
 
Witnesses: Yemen forces blast opposition TV as battle rages

(CNN) -- Government forces in Yemen hit an opposition-controlled television 
station with rocket-propelled grenades overnight, taking it off the air, 
witnesses in the Arab nation told CNN Thursday.

The assault came as street battles raged between government forces and members 
of the al-Hashid tribe, which has turned against President Ali Abdullah Saleh 
as he tries to cling to power in the face of protests.

A leader of the tribe said 51 people were killed in the overnight clashes.

Abdulqawi Al-Qaisi, the chief of staff for Hashid tribal leader Sadeq Al-Ahmar, 
said the dead included tribesmen and civilians.

Government-run television reported Thursday that four people were killed and 11 
were injured by a shell fired by tribe members.

On Sunday, Saleh backed out of a deal to step aside in the face of months of 
protests against his 33-year rule. Opposition leaders had already signed the 
document, brokered by the regional Gulf Cooperation Council, but Saleh insisted 
that they sign it again in his presence.

The United States ordered families of government employees to leave the 
country, along with "certain nonemergency personnel," citing "terrorist 
activities and civil unrest."

The travel warning follows Wednesday's clashes between tribesmen and government 
forces near Sanaa International Airport.

All arriving flights were diverted to Aden Wednesday, and no flights were 
taking off from Sanaa, said a transportation official who asked not to be 
identified because he is not authorized to speak to the media.

The flight restrictions were imposed as anti-regime tribesmen battling Yemeni 
forces occupied the government's news agency compound and the tourism ministry 
in the capital Wednesday, the latest regime entities to be taken over during 
this week's street battles, witnesses said.

Hundreds of al-Hashid tribesman occupied and surrounded the SABA news agency 
compound and the tourism building in Sanaa after fighting with government 
forces in the Hasabah neighborhood.

Other ministry buildings in Hasabah also have been seized. They are the 
Interior, Trade and Commerce, the Education and the Local Administration 
headquarters. These and other government buildings in Hasabah were evacuated 
Tuesday night by the Interior Ministry as fighting raged.

Yemeni state-run television said supporters loyal to the al-Hashid tribe were 
shelling government facilities.

The fighting broke out after a regionally brokered deal calling for Yemeni 
President Ali Abdullah Saleh to leave office fell through. Saleh himself is a 
member of the al-Hashid tribe, a huge and powerful entity with many strands.

After a march Friday, during which dozens of anti-government demonstrators were 
killed, Sheikh Sadeq al-Ahmar, a leader of the main opposition al-Hashid tribe, 
embraced the anti-government demonstrators and broke ranks with the president. 
Since then, more and more tribal members have turned their backs on the 
president as well.

The violence has attracted international attention.

"We expressed our joint concern on the deteriorating situation on the ground," 
U.S. President Barack Obama told reporters Wednesday in England with British 
Prime Minister David Cameron.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon expressed fears that the battles might 
further destabilize the situation and called for "an immediate end to the 
fighting" and the continuation of efforts to resolve the country's political 
crisis.

Saleh's office called media outlets, including Yemen TV, and issued statements 
from Saleh defending himself.

"I will not be forced by the tribes to enter a civil war," Saleh said. "We will 
not give in and will fight those who threaten security and stability in the 
country."

Similar clashes Tuesday killed as many as 41 people -- with both sides claiming 
casualties. Al-Ahmar said 17 men from the al-Hashid tribe were killed in those 
clashes. The government said 14 soldiers and 10 civilians were killed.

Yemen, a key U.S. ally in the fight against al Qaeda, has been roiled by 
protests for most of the year amid anti-government demonstrations that have 
swept across much of the Arab world. Many of the protesters in Yemen want Saleh 
to step aside after three decades of rule.

CNN's Mohammed Jamjoom contributed to this report.
 
 
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