Saturday, October 8, 2011

Nobel winner is 'mother' of Yemen's revolution

Ahmed Al-Haj,Sarah El Deeb, Associated Press

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Sanaa, Yemen -- She is known among Yemenis as the "iron woman" and the "mother of the revolution." A conservative woman fighting for change in a conservative Muslim and tribal society, Nobel Peace Prize winner Tawakkul Karman has been the face of the mass uprising against the authoritarian regime of President Ali Abdullah Saleh.

The 32-year-old Karman has been an activist for human rights in Yemen for years, but when she was arrested in January, it helped detonate protests by hundreds of thousands demanding the ouster of Saleh and the creation of a democratic government.

When the Nobel announcement was made Friday, Karman was where she has been nearly every day for the past eight months: in a protest tent in Change Square, the roundabout in central Sanaa that has been the symbolic epicenter of the revolt.

"This prize is not for Tawakkul, it is for the whole Yemeni people, for the martyrs, for the cause of standing up to (Saleh) and his gangs. Every tyrant and dictator is upset by this prize because it confronts injustice," she said from her tent. With the award, the Nobel committee gave a nod to the Arab Spring, the wave of uprisings that have swept the Middle East, forcing out the leaders of Tunisia, Egypt and Libya.

In Yemen, millions have been turning out for protests in the capital, Sanaa, and cities around the country since late January. Still, Saleh has determinedly refused to step down.

Karman and the other young activists who have led Yemen's uprising have created a movement that is unique in this impoverished nation on the southern tip of the Arabian Peninsula, where tribal allegiances run deep, and much of the public is religiously conservative. Like the majority of Yemeni women, Karman once wore the niqab, the conservative Muslim garb that covers the face with a veil and hides the body in heavy robes, leaving only the eyes visible. But last year, she changed to a more moderate headscarf, covering just her hair - she said she wanted to be "face to face with my activist colleagues."

Karman had organized protests and sit-ins as early as 2007. She campaigned for greater rights for women and an end to harassment of journalists, heading Women Journalists without Chains, an organization advocating for press freedoms.

Yemen president says will leave power in coming days

SANAA | Sat Oct 8, 2011

(Reuters) - Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh said on Saturday he would leave power in the coming days, the closest the veteran leader has come to announcing he plans to step down after nine months of mass protests against his 33 year rule.

"I reject power and I will continue to reject it, and I will be leaving power in the coming days," Saleh said in a speech on state television.

Saleh has been clinging to his position while opposition and ruling party representatives cast about for a formula to see through a transition-of-power deal.

"I call on my supporters to persevere and to confront any challenge," Saleh said.

Protests against Saleh's rule have paralyzed Yemen, weakening government control over swathes of the country and fanning fears al Qaeda's regional wing may use the upheaval to expand its foothold near shipping routes through the Red Sea.

Saleh has thrice backed out of signing a Gulf-mediated power transition deal. The opposition says the government is holding up negotiations after Saleh's return from Saudi Arabia, where he had gone for treatment after a June assassination attempt.

Blast in south Yemen's Aden kills one, hurts seven

Reuters October 8, 2011

ADEN — An explosion at a police station in Yemen's southern port city of Aden killed a soldier and wounded seven others on Saturday in what security officials described as a "terrorist plot," and police fought with gunmen blocking several main roads.

The clashes arose out of a civil disobedience campaign by Yemeni youths who are part of a popular movement to oust autocratic President Ali Abdullah Saleh. Yemen has been largely paralyzed by nearly nine months of mass protests against Saleh.

Neighbouring oil giant Saudi Arabia and the United States fear that spreading anarchy in Yemen is emboldening al-Qaida's regional wing, one of the global jihadi network's most aggressive branches.

Police said an improvised explosive device detonated outside a station in Aden's al-Qawla district, shattering windows and setting a nearby car ablaze. One of the soldiers on guard was killed. Five others, plus two police officers, were wounded.

"The evidence suggests this was a terrorist attack, we believe extremists were behind it," a security official said.

Aden, which lies east of a strategic shipping strait where some 3 million barrels of oil pass daily, has been in a security grip for months. Its neighbouring province, Abyan, has been plunged into chaos since militants suspected of ties to al-Qaida began seizing cities in the coastal region several months ago.

Tens of thousands of refugees have fled into Aden and neighbouring provinces from the bloodshed and the Yemeni army has struggled to regain territory lost to the militants.

Other suspects for the attack on Saturday could be separatist militants. A long simmering secessionist movement in south Yemen has been on the rise as the Arabian Peninsula country sinks further into turmoil.

Saleh, in power for 33 tears, has been clinging to his position as opposition and ruling party representatives cast about for a formula to see through a transition-of-power deal.

Earlier on Saturday, several streets in Aden were shut down by youths who back the anti-government protests. They dragged burning tires into several streets to stop traffic.

Main traffic arteries were shut for several hours until police began clashing with armed men guarding the blockades and eventually re-opened the streets.

"I couldn't go to work because of all the roadblocks. There was chaos on the streets so I rushed back home for my own safety," said Amgad Thabit, 28, a local businessman.

Many roads in Aden have remained closed for months, crisscrossed with rocks, burned cars and blocks of cement.

Yemen Opposition Calls Demonstrations To Honor Nobel Winner

October 08, 2011

Yemen's opposition is calling for more demonstrations in the capital and across the country to honor Nobel Peace Prize winner Tawakul Karman.

Anti-government websites said that "we call on the free Yemeni people to take the streets and honor this great lady."

Karman, a human rights leader seeking to end the 33-year rule of President Ali Abdallah Saleh, won the Nobel committee's award on October 7 along with Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and her activist compatriot Leymah Gbowee.

Yemen has been gripped since February by an uprising calling for the ouster of Saleh.

Friday, October 7, 2011

Nobel Peace Prize Winner Tawakkul Karman Profile: 'The Mother Of Yemen's Revolution'

AHMED AL-HAJ and SARAH EL DEEB 10/ 7/11 AP

SANAA, Yemen — She is known among Yemenis as "the iron woman" and the "mother of the revolution." A conservative woman fighting for change in a conservative Muslim and tribal society, Nobel Peace Prize winner Tawakkul Karman has been the face of the mass uprising against the authoritarian regime of President Ali Abdullah Saleh.

The 32-year-old Karman has been an activist for human rights in Yemen for years, but when she was arrested in January, it helped detonate protests by hundreds of thousands demanding the ouster of Saleh and the creation of a democratic government.

When the Nobel announcement was made Friday, Karman was where she has been nearly every day for the past eight months: in a protest tent in Change Square, the roundabout in central Sanaa that has been the symbolic epicenter of the revolt.

"This prize is not for Tawakkul, it is for the whole Yemeni people, for the martyrs, for the cause of standing up to (Saleh) and his gangs. Every tyrant and dictator is upset by this prize because it confronts injustice," she told The Associated Press from her tent as she received congratulations from other activists.

Karman – who shares the prize with Liberian President Ellen Sirleaf Johnson and Liberian peace activist Leymah Gbowee – is the first Arab woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize. With the award, the Nobel committee gave a nod to the Arab Spring, the wave of uprisings that have swept the Middle East, forcing out the leaders of Tunisia, Egypt and Libya.

In Yemen, millions have been turning out for protests in the capital Sanaa and cities around the country since late January. Still, Saleh has determinedly refused to step down.

Karman and the other young activists who have led Yemen's uprising have created a movement that is unique in this impoverished nation on the southern tip of the Arabian Peninsula, where tribal allegiances run deep, much of the public is religiously conservative and weapons are rife, with guns in nearly every home.

Like the majority of Yemeni women, Karman once wore the niqab, the conservative Muslim garb that covers the face with a veil and hides the body in heavy robes, leaving only the eyes visible. But last year, she changed to a more moderate headscarf, covering just her hair – she told AP she wanted to be "face to face with my activist colleagues."

She is also a member of Yemen's opposition Islamic fundamentalist Islah Party, but her participation in the protests brought sharp criticism from conservatives in the party, some of whom denounced her in mosque sermons. Saleh's regime itself tried to discredit her by spreading a photo of her sitting in a protest tent with a male colleague – with others around them cut out from the picture – seeking to taint her as sinful for being alone with a man.

Women have participated heavily in the protests. The organizers have intentionally sought to cut across tribal lines. And they have resolutely remained peaceful, even as Yemen seems to explode around them. Saleh's security forces have repeatedly opened fire on protesters. Sanaa and other cities have turned into war zones as regime forces battle with dissident military units and tribal fighters opposed to Saleh.

Regime snipers shot at protesters in Change Square on Friday, killing one and wounding four others, according to a security official speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the press. Government forces also bombarded Sanaa's Hassaba district, a center for anti-government tribesmen, and fired on the home of the tribesmen's leader, Sheik Sadeq al-Ahmar, one of Saleh's top rivals.

"Neither Ali nor his gangs will drag Yemen toward war and infighting," Karman told the AP. "We chose peace, we could have resorted to violence in this revolution and we could have settled it in days and not months by resorting to our weapons ... But we chose peace and only peace."

"Don't worry about Yemen. Yemen started in peace and it will end its revolution in peace, and it will start its new civil state with peace," she said.

Her husband, Mohammed al-Nahmi, sitting with her in the tent as he received congratulations, told AP, "This is a prize she deserves. Before she is my wife, she is a colleague, and a companion in the struggle."

Thorbjoern Jagland, who heads the five-member Norwegian Nobel Committee told AP that including Karman in the prize is "a signal that the Arab Spring cannot be successful without including the women in it."

He also noted Karman's party's links to the Muslim brotherhood, "which in the West is perceived as a threat to democracy." He added, "I don't believe that. There are many signals that that kind of movement can be an important part of the solution."

Saleh's regime gave no immediate comment on Karman's Nobel win. But a lawmaker from his ruling party, Mohammed Bin Naji Shayef, who heads parliament's human rights commission, said the prize reflects "how much Yemeni women have achieved in the country's political life" and "should be celebrated by everyone in Yemen."

Karman, a mother of three, originally hails from the southern city of Taiz, a city known for its prominent middle class and university intellectuals that has long been a hotbed of opposition to Saleh. Her father, Abdul-Salam Karman, was once the legal affairs minister under Saleh, but resigned to protest government corruption.

Karman had organized protests and sit-ins as early as 2007, referring to her regular gatherings outside government offices in Sanaa as the "Freedom square." She campaigned for greater rights for women and an end to harassment of journalists, heading Women Journalists without Chains, an organization advocating for press freedoms.

In December 2010, the uprising erupted in Tunisia after a local fruit vendor in the North African nation, Mohamed Bouazizi, set himself on fire.

In Yemen, Karman led protests in support of the Tunisians, sending out mobile phont texts to urge people to join. The small protests, comprising no more than 200 people, were broken up with water cannons and batons.

On Jan. 23, authorities arrested Karman.

The move was meant as a warning to her, but it backfired, sending a wave of women protesters into the streets of Sanaa and other cities, a rare sight in Yemen. Karman was released early the next day and by the afternoon she was leading another protest.

She and other organizers were further inspired by Egypt, where protesters seized control of Cairo's central Tahrir Square demanding the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak.

Days after Mubarak stepped down in February, Yemeni protesters, with Karman and other male protest organizers at the helm, seized a major intersection in the heart of Sanaa, which then came to be known as Change Square. Karman has been part of a council grouping the disparate protest groups and an organization representing the youth of revolution.

Since Feb. 17, the protest camp has remained in place, even as security forces have repeatedly opened fire on it. In a recent wave of fighting between security forces and dissident military forces in the capital last month, more than 150 people were killed, most of them protesters.