Sunday, July 17, 2011

Yemen protesters set up transitional council

Alarabiya.net English

Anti-government protesters shout slogans during a rally to demand the ouster of Yemen"s President Ali Abdullah Saleh at Tagheer square in Sanaa July 16, 2011. (REUTERS Photo)
Anti-government protesters shout slogans during a rally to demand the ouster of Yemen"s President Ali Abdullah Saleh at Tagheer square in Sanaa July 16, 2011. (REUTERS Photo)
Yemeni protesters formed a transitional council of opposition figures on Saturday to lead efforts to try to force President Ali Abdullah Saleh from power.

Youth groups, which have been at the forefront of more than five months of protests against President Saleh’s three decade rule, told a news conference that the 17 member council would include former Yemeni President Ali Nasser Mohammed and leaders of several opposition groups, including exiles.
They named General Abdullah Ali Aleiwa, a former defense minister, as their choice for armed forces commander.

An official from an anti-Saleh coalition of mainstream opposition parties, said the Joint Meeting would not support the new council. The coalition has also called for a transitional body.

“This council does not reflect (the views) of the Joint Meeting, because we have a different plan. It only represents those who set it up,” Hamid Assim, deputy secretary general of an Arab nationalist opposition party, told Reuters.

President Saleh, who is in Saudi Arabia for medical treatment following an assassination attempt in June, has backed out three times from a Gulf-brokered plan to ease him from power.

Saudi Arabia, a conservative Muslim absolute monarchy, does not want to see people power bring political change on its borders. It has long been Mr. Saleh’s main financial backer, and Mr. Saleh may not stand down until Riyadh demands it.

Separately, a Yemeni deputy minister said on Saturday that the United Arab Emirates had pledged 3 million barrels of oil to Yemen, which faces a fuel crisis due to attacks on a pipeline during the widespread political unrest.

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