Yemen president promises elections

Huge crowds across Yemen have demanded that President Ali Abdullah Saleh leave after months of unrest which has put the Arab world's poorest country on the brink of an economic meltdown.

Huge crowds across Yemen have demanded that President Ali Abdullah Saleh leave after months of unrest which has put the Arab world's poorest country on the brink of an economic meltdown.

Published Mar 10, 2011

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Sanaa - Yemen president Ali Abdullah Saleh, hoping to defuse increasingly violent protests against his 32-year rule, said on Thursday he would draw up a new constitution to create a parliamentary system of government.

An opposition spokesman swiftly rejected the proposal and called for anti-government rallies to continue.

Yemen, a neighbour of oil giant Saudi Arabia and the poorest country on the Arabian Peninsula, has been rocked by weeks of demonstrations against Saleh's autocratic administration.

Speaking to thousands of cheering supporters gathered in a soccer stadium, Saleh said he hoped his opponents would join a unity government to help put in place a new political system, but added that he doubted they would join forces with him.

“Firstly we will form a new constitution based on the separation of powers. A referendum on this new constitution will be held before the end of this year,” he said.

“I'm already sure that this initiative won't be accepted by the opposition, but in order to do the right thing, I am offering this to the people and they will decide,” he added.

Opposition spokesman Mohammed Qahtan said the proposals did not meet the protesters' demands.

“This initiative is too late,” he said. “The demands on the street go beyond that and are bigger than that.”

Saleh has governed Yemen for 32 years, but his rule has come under severe threat by nationwide demonstrations that have left almost 30 people dead.

The president has already made a number of concessions to his opponents but has refused to bow to their central demand that he relinquish power immediately, saying he wanted to see out his term which expires in 2013.

Yemen is a presidential republic, where the head of state wields significant powers and the government has been dominated by his political allies. - Reuters

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