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UN SAYS SALEH MUST GO

UN resolution urges Saleh to step down
Sat Oct 22, 2011

The UN Security Council has approved a resolution urging Yemen's Ali Abdullah Saleh to immediately sign a deal to step down.


The resolution, unanimously approved by the 15 members on Friday, "strongly condemns" the deadly government attacks on demonstrators and supports the (Persian) Gulf Cooperation Council ([P]GCC) peace plan, AFP reported.

The 69-year-old Saleh has repeatedly refused to sign the deal, according to which he would hand over power to Vice President Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi in return for immunity from prosecution.

On September 23, Saleh returned to the country from Saudi Arabia, where he was receiving treatment for injuries he received in a June 3 rocket attack on the presidential palace.

Meanwhile, thousands of Yemenis once again took to the streets of Sana'a on Friday to call on Saleh to step down.

Yemenis have been demanding the ouster of Saleh since January.
Hundreds of demonstrators have been killed and thousands more have been injured in the regime's repression of the popular uprising.

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UN SAYS SALEH MUST GO

'Saleh urged to learn from Gaddafi fate'

Fri Oct 21, 2011


Tens of thousands of Yemeni anti-government protesters attend the Friday Prayers in Sana'a on October 21, 2011.

Tens of thousands of Yemenis have taken to the streets in the capital to call on Ali Abdullah Saleh to learn from the fate of slain Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi and step down.


Anti-government demonstrators said on Friday that Gaddafi's death is a warning for Saleh who has resisted nationwide calls to end his 33-year rule and that the longer he resists the nation's demands for change, the higher the price of failure will be.

"Ali, it's your turn next. Every dictator meets his end," Yemeni demonstrators chanted as they marched down Sittine Avenue in Sana'a while under the protection of dissident troops of the First Armored Division.

"Kaddafi's death has fired up revolutionaries across the world, but especially in yeomen," said Walid al-Ammari, a spokesman for the youth activists, adding that "Saleh must draw the lessons from the death of Gaddafi who called the Libyans rats and was finally caught like a rat in a tunnel".

Yemeni demonstrators also called for the prosecution of Saleh over the killing of hundreds of anti-government protesters.

"We want to put him on trial, we do not want him to die like Gaddafi, we want to put him on trial for what he did to our children and our sons, we want to take his blood and flesh like he took our blood and flesh and questioned our honor," anti-government protester Alia Abdulla said.

Meanwhile, the United Nation's Security Council is expected to approve a resolution calling on Saleh to immediately hand over power to his deputy and condemning the killings blamed on his government.

Yemenis have been calling for the removal of Saleh since late January. Hundreds of Yemenis have been killed and thousands more have been injured in the violent regime repression of popular protests against the Saudi- and US-backed Saleh regime.

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FM

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