Yemen’s Saleh vows to overcome crisis

Yemeni protesters take part in a demonstration to demand the ousting of President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who has refused to bow to pressure.

Yemeni protesters take part in a demonstration to demand the ousting of President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who has refused to bow to pressure.

Published Jun 17, 2011

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Sana’a/Aden - President Ali Abdullah Saleh vowed on Thursday to overcome Yemen's crisis, signalling once again he has no plans to quit, and in the latest in a wave of raids, gunmen attacked government buildings and a checkpoint.

Gulf Arab states have seen Saleh, forced to have surgery in Saudi Arabia after an attack on his palace this month, thwart three diplomatic bids to ease him from power and end a political crisis that has threatened to descend into civil war.

“Yemen is capable of overcoming the crisis and achieving the supreme interests of the Yemeni people,” state media quoted Saleh as telling Bahrain's king by telephone.

Months of pro-democracy protests against Saleh's 33-year rule have nearly paralysed the country, leading to severe shortages of electricity, water and fuel.

Shipping sources said a tanker carrying 600 000 barrels of oil arrived at the port of Aden as part of a grant of three million barrels promised by Saudi Arabia. The sources said it would go to Aden's refinery, idled since a blast in April cut the pipeline on which it relies.

The gift underlined how fearful oil giant Saudi Arabia is that a bloody political crisis will tip its poor southern neighbour into chaos and give militants a foothold next to oil shipping routes.

Opponents of Saleh say he has let his forces hand over power to Islamist militants, who seized Zinjibar - the capital of the flashpoint southern province of Abyan - last month, in order to stoke fears that only his rule prevents an Islamist takeover.

On Thursday, masked gunmen, whom Yemen's army called al-Qaeda members, briefly took over a security headquarters and government building in Masameer, southern Yemen, residents told Reuters by telephone.

“There was a long battle with the security forces,” one resident said. The gunmen retreated after using up their ammunition, the resident said.

One gunman was shot dead and three soldiers were wounded in an attack on a checkpoint in a nearby town, residents said.

Three guards were killed on Wednesday when gunmen stormed other state buildings in the city of al-Hota, close to the site of Thursday's attack in Masameer. Southern separatists and Islamist fighters are both active in the region.

Yemeni forces said they caught ten suspected al-Qaeda operatives trying to sneak into the southern port city of Aden late on Wednesday. Aden sits by strategic shipping lanes along which three million barrels of oil pass daily.

At the same time, thousands of refugees have been fleeing to Aden since militants took over Zinjibar.

A local security official said military checkpoints and patrols of banks and government buildings in Aden had been stepped up and that an attempt to blow up a hotel there had been foiled.

“Security forces captured saboteurs who were trying to plant an explosive device in a hotel in Aden,” he said. Five more people were detained for firing on residents and raiding stores in the Mansoora area of the city, he said.

Yemen's Defence Ministry said two people were killed on Thursday after “terrorists” fired mortar rounds in the city of Zinjibar, most of whose population has fled.

Yemen scholar Gregory Johnsen of Princeton University said both the government and the opposition had tried to use al-Qaeda's presence in Yemen to their advantage in the media.

“We're not sure what's going on in Abyan or in Lahej (in the south) or even in Aden,” he said, expressing scepticism towards state reports of the capture or killing of al-Qaeda militants.

“On the ground of course, al-Qaeda exists... but not all militants in Yemen are al-Qaeda,” Johnsen said.

Yemeni scholar Ali Seif Hassan said the rise in violence suggested militant groups that had previously co-operated with Saleh were no longer doing so as his power waned.

“When the new regime comes, they will negotiate with them. They are not al-Qaeda, to some extent they are like al-Qaeda.” - Reuters

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