Tuesday, March 1, 2011

President Saleh Dismisses Four Governors

By Fatik Al-Rodaini

Sana'a- Mar 1, 2011- President Ali Abduallh Saleh dismissed on Tuesday governors of four provinces in Yemen's southern and eastern provinces.

New decrees were issued appointing three of them members in Shura Council, and appointing the two others vices of two ministries.

The decrees assigned governor of Aden, Adnan Omar Al-Jeffri, governor of Hadramout, Salem Ahmed Al-Khanbashi, and governor of Hodeida, Ahmed Salem Al-Jabali as members in Shura Council.

The other decree assigned governor of Lahj, Mohssen Al-Nakeeb as a vice minister of the Yemen's Industry and Trade Ministry.

No reason was given for the dismissal.

Two People Killed in Lahj

Two People Killed in Lahj

By Fatik Al-Rodaini

Sana'a- Mar 1, 2011- At least two people were killed, including a soldier, and several others wounded in two separate attacks in Yemen's southern province of Lahj.

Private sources said that an exchange of gun fire erupted between security forces and armed group in Habelin district after Yemeni forces attacked a checkpoint, belonging to Sothern Movement, killing Yehia Hasen Al-Zaitona a military leader in Harak.

In return, an armed group from Southern Movement fired live bullets towards former security manger of Radfan district.

A hospital source confirmed the deaths of the two people.

Yemen's President Blames US, Israel for Arab Unrest

Sana'a- Mar 1, 2011- Tens of thousands of Yemeni opposition activists have rallied in Sana'a to demand the ouster of President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who accused his ally the United States for the first time of fueling daily protests against him.

Speaking Tuesday, Saleh accused the United States and Israel of working together to cause uprisings in Yemen and other parts of the Arab world, saying the alleged plot is orchestrated in Tel Aviv under U.S. supervision.

Saleh has cooperated with Washington in recent years in fighting al-Qaida militants who have used lawless parts of his impoverished nation to plot attacks against the United States and its allies. He has been in power since 1978 and refuses to step down before his presidential term ends in 2013.

Shortly after the president's comments, opposition activists gathered in a square near Sana'a University, chanting anti-Saleh slogans and protesting the killing of at least 24 people by Saleh loyalists since anti-government protests erupted in the country last month. Most of the killings happened in the southern city of Aden.

Saleh has offered to hold a dialogue with opposition parties on forming a national unity government, but the parties rejected the idea Monday and agreed to join the mostly student-led protests in Sana'a and elsewhere.

Source: VOA

Yemen, Japan Sign MoU Worth US$4 Million

SANA'A, March 1, 2011- Yemen's Technical Education and Vocational Training Ministry and Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) have signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) worth US$4 million to improve technical education and vocational training in Yemen, Saba news agency reported.

The project funded by Japan also included delivery of equipment required to improve the Dhahban Institute and develop curriculum involving electricity and car maintenance in accordance with the latest international standards.

Japanese experts would also be brought in to train the trainers and enhance the ministry's system.

The project also aims to raise the quality of technical education and vocational training in order to meet the needs of regional and international markets, Saba reported.

The MoU was signed by Minister of Technical Education and Vocational Training Ibrahim Hajri, Dhahban Institute Dean Ahmed Sa'ad Hadi and senior consultant of the project.

Hajri considered the project initiated in 2010/2011 school year as one of the important projects to develop the technical education system.

He commended Japan for supporting technical and vocational education which would create job opportunities for youths and reduce unemployment rates.

Meanwhile, JICA representative in Yemen Takeshi Komori pointed to the importance of carrying out the project in Dhahban Institute to enhance the graduates' capabilities in coping with labour market needs.

Source: BERNAMA

UN warns Yemen authorities against protest clampdown

GENEVA, Mar 1, 2011- The United Nations human rights chief, Navi Pillay, has warned authorities in Yemen against any attempts to use force against protesters.

Yemen has been hit by the wave of unrest that has swept through the Arab world, toppling authoritarian regimes in Tunisia and Egypt and stoking mass popular uprisings in Libya and Bahrain.

The protesters are demanding the resignation of the president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, who has been in power for 32 years.

"We have seen over and over again in the past few weeks that violent responses, in breach of international law, do not make the protesters go away and only serve to exacerbate their frustration and anger," Pillay said.

She added that people have the "legitimate right to express their grievances and demands to their government."

Government Press Release on its Stance

Sana'a- Mar 1, 2011- The Government of the Republic of Yemen says it is disappointed at the announcement by JMP (Opposition Bloc) that it has no intention of participating in a coalition government. The government strongly believes that dialogue is the cornerstone of any political reconciliation agreement. Unfortunately, JMP quickly rejected the newly proposed eight point plan. Earlier yesterday, the Committee of Religious Scholars working with the President of the Republic and senior members of the ruling party, formulated the rejected plan. The plan included the following:
1. All parties are to end demonstrations and sit-ins to bring an end to streets congestion, preventing chaos, destruction of public and private properties.
2. All parties are to end inciting and provocative media campaigns in order to create a suitable environment for national dialogue.
3. Establishment of a mediation committee to end political disputes. Five prominent judges will be selected to the committee. GPC will choose two Judges, JMP will also select two and the Committee of Religious Scholars will choose the fifth member.
4. The release of prisoners who has not been proven guilty or don’t have pending court cases .
5. Forming a national unity government (coalition government).
6. Intensifying anti-corruption investigations and activities by speeding up the prosecution of pending cases.
7. The withdrawal of the current election and referendum laws. Parliament will have to approve a new law with the consensus of both parties (Ruling & Opposition).
8. The Withdrawal of proposed constitutional amendments.
Furthermore, a Presidential directive established an investigatory committee into the recent outbreaks of violence in the City of Aden. The committee will be headed by Minister of State Abdulqader Helal and includes Deputy Attorney General, Deputy Minister of Local Affairs, Chairwoman of the National Womens' Commettie and Dean of the Lawyers Union.

Source: Yemen Post

Yemeni Man's Torture Claims

Yemeni Man's Torture Claims

Sana'a- Mar 1, 2011- A Yemeni man alleges he was arrested by the CIA in Tanzania in 2003, flown to Djibouti to be tortured for a fortnight, and left languishing for years in secret prisons in Afghanistan and elsewhere.

Mohammed al-Asad, 51, had been living with his family in Tanzania since 1985, when he was arrested and put on a plane to an unidentified country later found to be Djibouti, the complaint says.

The suit was lodged with the Gambia-based African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights in December 2009 but only made public on Monday by US rights groups.

According to the complaint, the plaintiff spent two weeks in solitary confinement in Djibouti, a tiny US ally in the Horn of Africa.

Asad says he was stripped, poked in the rectum, photographed nude and blindfolded, while being repeatedly interrogated by a woman who said she was American and a male Djibouti national.

The plaintiff learned he was suspected of providing material support to the Muslim charity al-Haramain, which the US put on a list of sponsors of terror in January 2004.

Later he was taken by plane to another jail, the compliant says, before being "held incommunicado in three secret US-run prisons around the world".

Asad's family was not informed of where he was detained.

Asad was eventually sent to Yemen in May 2005 and finally left prison a year later. He was never prosecuted for anything related to terrorism.

The African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights, which has jurisdiction over countries that have ratified the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights - Djibouti among them - must now decide whether to take the complaint.

"This case is the first filed before the African Commission on rendition in Africa, but it is far from an isolated case," said Solomon Sacco, a lawyer for the International Centre for the Legal Protection of Human Rights who is working on the case.

"Evidence continues to emerge of a systematic global practise of rendition," said Sacco. It "is part of a growing demand for recognition and justice for victims of rendition that will not go away".

Rendition flights, whereby suspects were transferred covertly to a third country or to US-run prisons, started after the September 11, 2001 attacks on New York and Washington.

Among those transported to secret interrogation facilities and tortured was Khaled Sheikh Mohammed, the alleged mastermind of the September 11, 2001 attacks who is now imprisoned at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba awaiting trial.

President Barack Obama has pursued a reform of major counterterrorism policies, including a more restricted CIA rendition program, but has still fought rendition cases on the basis that state secrets must be safeguarded.

Source: AFP