Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Yemen:Saleh signs power-transfer deal

Finally, Salehs 33-yr rule to end
Reuters 
Nov 24, 2011, 07.18AM IST
timesofindia.indiatimes.com

Fate Sealed: Saleh signs power-transfer deal in Riyadh on Wednesday.
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DUBAI: Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh signed a Gulf initiative on Wednesday to hand over power to his deputy as part of a proposal to end months of protests that have pushed the Arab country to the brink of civil war.

Saudi state television broadcast live images of Saleh signing the accord in the presence of Saudi King Abdullah and Crown Prince Nayef.Yemeni opposition officials signed the accord after president Saleh.

It was the fourth attempt to wrap up a power transfer accord that Saleh backed out of on three previous occasions at the last minute,fuelling turmoil that has bolstered al-Qaida militants next door to Saudi Arabia,the worlds No 1 oil producer.

Activists who have camped in central Sanaa have demanded Saleh end his 33 years of rule now. Government troops skirmished with gunmen loyal to a powerful opposition tribal leader in the capital and some clashes were reported in the southern city of Taiz.

The president ... arrived this morning in Riyadh on a visit to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia,following an invitation from the Saudi leadership,to attend the signing of the Gulf initiative and its operational mechanism, state news agency Saba reported.

UN envoy Jamal Benomar,with support from US and European diplomats,managed to devise a compromise to implement the power transfer deal crafted by the sixmember Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC).

Under the GCC plan,Saleh will shift all his powers to his deputy,Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi,who would form a new government with the opposition and call for an early presidential election within three months.

Months of protests have rekindled conflicts with Yemens Islamist militants and separatists,threatening anarchy in a country Washington regards as a front line against al-Qaida.

The unrest has also raised fear of civil war on the borders of Saudi Arabia,a crucial strategic ally of the United States.

The fears are shared by Salehs erstwhile United States allies,who had long backed him in their fight against al-Qaida.
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