Anti-Saleh protests sweep Yemen

A growing wave of protests across Yemen is mounting pressure on President Ali 
Abdullah Saleh to end his 32-year rule.

A day earlier, Saleh accused the US of instigating the mounting protests 
against him, but the gambit has failed to halt demands for his ouster.

On Wednesday, several thousand demonstrators turned out yet again in the 
capital Sanaa for what are now almost daily rallies against him and denied any 
links to the US.

"The people who come to the square are youths, free youths who have no 
connection whatsoever to any foreign entity, their only concern is to topple 
the regime," Ali Al Sakkaf, a protester, said.

"I think that the solution is now the departure of Saleh, no more, no less, 
because people are desperate"

Ali Makhlough,
Yemeni protester

Saleh, 68, a US ally already struggling to quash a resurgent al-Qaeda wing 
based in Yemen while keeping rebellions in the north and south at bay, has 
failed to stamp out protests fuelled by crushing poverty and soaring 
unemployment.

Yemeni protesters are frustrated with widespread corruption and nearly a third 
of the workforce is out of a job. More than 40 per cent of Yemen's 23 million 
people live on less than two dollars a day.

"Every day the hopes for change are diminished by Saleh after 33 years of him 
seizing power. I think that the solution is now the departure of Saleh, no 
more, no less, because people are desperate," Ali Makhlough, a protester, said 
on Wednesday.

Protests have gained steam during six weeks of rallies that have left 26 people 
dead in clashes between protesters
and police or armed Saleh loyalists.

As protesters across the country stake out camps to maintain 24-hour sit-ins, 
the demonstrations seem unlikely to fade soon.

The protests, led by students and activists, have been joined by religious 
organisations, southern separatists, tribal groups and the opposition coalition 
after it backed out of talks with Saleh.

'Friday of warning'

The momentum against the president, who refuses to step down until elections in 
2013, has kept growing since protests erupted a month ago - inspired by 
successful uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia.

Yemen's opposition presented Saleh with a road map on Wednesday for a smooth 
transition of power this year, offering him a graceful exit as street pressure 
continues to mount against him.


Al Jazeera's Hashem Ahelbarra, reporting from Sanna, said: "The opposition is 
waiting for an answer and they have decided to organise what they are calling a 
Friday of warning in case they don't get an answer."

"The opposition describe it as a roadmap of Saleh's departure, they want him to 
announce when he plans to leave. Then the opposition with the parliament will 
craft a new transitional plan," he said.

Saleh has been meeting with tribal and military leaders to try and rally 
support. He also offered the opposition coalition a unity government. It 
rejected the offer and vowed to side with protesters in the streets.

Saleh has been an important US ally in the fight against al-Qaeda, accepting 
tens of millions of dollars in US military and other aid and allowing American 
drone strikes on al-Qaeda targets.

However, on Tuesday, Saleh seemed to be turning on Washington. In a speech to 
about 500 students and lecturers at Sanaa University, he claimed the US, along 
with Israel, is behind the protest movement.

Saleh also alleged that opposition figures meet regularly with the US 
ambassador in Sanaa.

Saleh's relationship with the US has been ambivalent, and he has at times 
attempted to play down his military alliance with Washington.

Anti-US sentiment remains strong in Yemen, as elsewhere in the region, and 
Saleh's comments appeared to be an attempt to discredit the protesters by 
suggesting they are serving foreign interests.



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