Armies of Liberation

Jane Novak's blog about Yemen

Welcome Al-Hurra Viewers and Rotana Readers

Filed under: Yemen, mentions — by Jane Novak at 4:00 pm on Sunday, July 20, 2008

Welcome! Please sign a letter for the Yemeni journalist. Thank you.
Click here please.

مرحبا. يرجى تسجيل الدخول لرسالة الصحافي اليمني. شكرا لك.
اضغط هنا من فضلك.

Update: that was the first time I heard al-Khaiwani’s voice. He sounded nice but different than I was expecting. And my kitchen looked clean. My kids were excited that our kitchen was on TV. My 20 year old dining room table managed to look shiney. I wish there was a transcript to translate but I’m sure it was a very good show. Any attention on al-Khaiwani’s case is good, but with that line-up, I’m sure the real issues got out.

Check Out al-Hurra Sunday 10 PM (Yemen Time)

Filed under: Yemen, mentions — by Jane Novak at 8:07 pm on Saturday, July 19, 2008

Update: its on at 3:10 in New York, I forgot about daylight savings. I think I’ll add a Yemen clock to the blog.

The show is “Eye on Democracy ” on al-Hurra satellite TV at 22:10 Yemen time, which is as we all know 14:10 New York time.

The woman who will be on is Zainab Al-Suwaij, Executive Director of the American Islamic Congress, which sponsors HAMSA which is coordinating the letters campaign for al-Khaiwani, the American guy is Joel Campagna who heads the Committee to Protect Journalists Middle East program and the Yemeni guy is Munier al-Mawari, a Yemeni American journalist and analyst.

The crew came to my house to tape an interview, which I though was nice. You can watch it streaming here. Also al-Hurra re-plays the show through the week, schedule here.

Also this week’s issue of Rotana magazine has a nice article (I hear) about al-Khaiwani and me, entitled, “American Jane Novak, the most famous foreigner known in Yemen”. I can’t believe I’m anywhere in a celebrity magazine but apparently so.

I just wish I could read the Rotana article and/or understand what they are saying on al-Hurra. My Arabic studies are going very slowly. Its such a hard language. I wish I could get somebody to live-blog the show.

Oh and in October, the Ladies Home Journal, again somewhat incomprehensible to me. However al-Khaiwani is still in jail. I’m going to need a new plan if the “End of the Sa’ada War” machinations don’t include his release along with all the kids and thousands others arbitrarily arrested in relation to the war.

Yemeni Government: Sending Photos to Jane Novak is A Crime

Filed under: Judicial, Media, Saada War, Yemen, mentions, photos/gifs — by Jane Novak at 11:12 am on Thursday, July 10, 2008

Yemen Observer
The investigations showed that they used internal and external journalists’ e-mails, and provide them with false news about the conflicts in order to raise the insurgents’ morals.

The security source said that the captured elements’ confessions disclosed that they used to write reports about public opinion trends and sent them together with some photographs to Abdulmalik al-Huthi and external journalists, particularly to the American journalist Jane Novak using certain links.

The Yemeni government doesn’t dispute the authenticity of the photos in question. The crime is sending them out of the country, “especially” to me.

Update: Not that the truth matters in Yemeni courts, but Howie reminds me he found the photos at a public forum and sent them to me. I’ll dig for the link where they were posted online way before I ever published them.

Announced by the 26 Septemper (sic), website of the Yemeni military, the charge is distributing information (probably photos of civilians killed by government bombing in Saada.) No mention of progress in tracking down the al-Qaeda in Yemen webmaster though…

From al-Motamar,

the ruling party’s website: The source also pointed out that elements of the network were writing leaflets and sending some information on trends of the public opinion and then sending them to terrorist Abdulmalik al-Houthi in addition to sending some film shots to journalists and newspapers abroad , among them American press especially to the American journalist Jane Novak. They were also writing daily bulletins of the so-called the information office of the rebels. The source added that elements of the network confessed of receiving funds from families of Hamidudin living in one of the neighbouring countries. He explained that after completing investigations with the network elements they would be sent to concerned authorities to be given just punishment for the acts they have committed.

Did they mean photos like these? The ones that show the Yemeni government’s war crimes? These photos were actually published by a Yemeni newspaper . They show Yemenis digging out the bodies of women and children killed by government bombing. In Sa’ada, the Yemeni government is waging an intensive and random bombing campaign against its own citizens as well as starving them with a food blockade. Very Sudan-like.

saada20081.jpg

saada20082.jpg

saada20084.jpg

Warning: Horrible pictures below the fold of the Yemen women and children killed by their own government in Saada Yemen. (Read on …)

Local blogger irritates government in Yemen

Filed under: Yemen, mentions — by Jane Novak at 7:38 am on Sunday, June 15, 2008

Update: Wow! The article looks so good in hard copy! And its really on the front page. The APP published a photo of one of the massive protests in South Yemen and another of the poor residents of Saada in North Yemen digging out the bodies of a woman and baby killed in one of the government bombing strikes. And there’s a map! And several nice photos of al-Khaiwani, including the one where he’s interviewing bin Shamlan and smiling. So thats NICE. Some of the comments are hilarious. Scroll through, they’re even funnier than the comments at the article on Alarabiya’s website.

Original post: Hey you Jersey people!!! Help me spring my friend, the Yemeni journalist al-Khaiwani. Click This to sign a letter and join the 1400 other people who protested the bogus case against al-Khaiwani. He was recently sentenced to six years in jail for writing about the near-genocide the Yemeni government is committing in the Northern Sa’ada province.

At the same time, the Yemeni government released all the al-Qaeda terrorists who bombed the USS Cole and killed 17 US sailors in October 2000. And many other terrorists as well. They are harder on journalists than on al-Qaeda. Even FBI directer Mueller went there recently to ask for the killers to be re-imprisoned or extradicted, and nada. Bush wrote a letter and sent his rep, zippo. The al-Qaeda guys are free (despite being sentenced to lengthy prison terms and escaping jail, they currently are on “loose house arrest”), but al-Khaiwani and other journalists are in jail.

Do you think our Senators might help me out? Can you drop them an email? Lautenburg is not too busy to pose for a pic with Bruce. (Bruuuce!) Menendez is talking about plug-in hybrid vehicles. One Congressman from Arizona, Trent Franks, wrote a letter to the Yemeni govt to immediately release al-Khaiwani and live up to their stated democratic principles. And the letter made a big impression among the Yemeni people. I know there’s loads of local issues here in the Garden State, but all I’m asking them for is a letter. (A bi-partisan congressional resolution wouldn’t be bad either.) And every international rights organization and the US State Department issued statements condemning the verdict, so there’s no doubt that al-Khaiwani is a prisoner of conscience.

This is a recent letter from al-Khaiwani to his supporters here (before he got sentenced to SIX years for an article “liable to undermine the morale of the military”. Seriously, that’s the charge he was found guilty of.)

We believe that democracy and freedom have an expensive price…

Thank you very much for this campaign, which comes in the context of the overall values that we believe, and they punish us when we believe those values and adopt them. I do not want to talk about myself, but rather the environment that we live in and suffering we endure from the inconsistency between what the authorities announce about democracy and freedoms, and what happens when we believe in those same things, democracy and freedoms.

They want us to practice our rights as they understand them, but we do it ideally. The regime said that democracy is the way of ruling, but when we try to practice our rights within this concept, criticizing the way that the regime governs and how they act, then they deal with us in a way that has no relation to democracy. They deal with us as outlaws. They use all of the state’s resources to attack anyone who has any opinions not corresponding with their opinions, and to attack those who even discuss their way of ruling.

What I am suffering and facing is part of the price I and many others pay for the democracy and freedom we hope to achieve in the future. At least we are preparing for a healthy environment that we want the next generation to live in. We believe that democracy and freedom have an expensive price, and this is a part of that price.

However that doesn’t mean we will keep silent and bend, as it is the price. We will refuse injustice peacefully. Solidarity is a way to enhance new civil values which support the democracy we will make with our sacrifice and with the support of others. We pay the price of the freedom for ourselves and for the generations after us. Again, thank you very much for your help and support.

Abdulkarim al-Khaiwani
05/10/08
Sana’a, Yemen

And then he went to jail.

To the regular readers: NICE article in the APP.

Local blogger irritates government in Yemen

To rulers’ chagrin, she backs free press, democracy

By KIM PREDHAM
STAFF WRITER

In a country many Americans might have trouble locating on a map, one Monmouth County woman has become the focus of both hatred and admiration by government officials, journalists and citizens — all without ever leaving the comfort of her home.

“It boggles my mind entirely,” said Jane Novak, 46, an energetic stay-at-home mother of two who — between caring for her children and husband — devotes hours of her time exposing the alleged dirty deeds of the government of Yemen, especially its crackdown on opposition journalists.

(Read on …)

Welcome NPR Listeners!

Filed under: Yemen, mentions — by Jane Novak at 9:45 pm on Friday, June 13, 2008

HI!!! Welcome to my blog, the bane of the Yemeni government. I’m banned in Yemen along with many Yemeni news websites including Yemen Portal, a news aggregator (??!!). The al-Qaeda websites remain accessible in Yemen, but I’m banned…. Go figure.

If you’d like to join the 1400 people who took a stand for civil rights in Yemen, you can sign a letter in support of my friend, the Yemeni journalist, al-Khaiwani. Please click here.

Check out the categories on my sidebar for a variety of information on Yemen.

Also, if you’d like to subscribe to this website for updates, the link is also on the sidebar.

Of course, if you really want to listen to the interview again, here you go:

Thanks to National Public Radio, On the Media.

Transcript: (Read on …)

American Launches Campaign to Defend Yemeni Journalist in Prison

Filed under: janes articles arabic, mentions — by Jane Novak at 11:29 am on Friday, June 13, 2008
أمريكية تطلق موقعا للدفاع عن صحفي يمني مسجون

Bokra.net

سيدة امريكية تطلق قبل يومين موقعا على شبكة الانترنت تنشر فيه مقالات تدعو الى الافراج عن الصحفي اليمني عبد الكريم الخيواني الذي دخل السجن لست سنوات

في الصورة: جين نوفاك. تصوير وكالات

تزعمت سيدة شقراء أمريكية حملة عالمية للمطالبة بإطلاق سراح الصحافي اليمني عبد الكريم الخيواني الذي قضت محكمة في صنعاء متخصصة بالإرهاب الاثنين الماضي (9-6-2008)، بسجنه لـ 6 سنوات، بتهمة الاتصال مع جماعة الحوثيين المتمردين في محافظة صعدة شمال اليمن، وفق ما اوردته العربية على موقعها على شبكة الانترنت.

وعلقت جين نوفاك التي أطلقت موقعا الكترونيا “جيوش التحرير” للدفاع عن الصحافي الخيواني وإيصال قضيته للعالم، على قرار المحكمة أنه “قرار ظالم ومثير للاستغراب”.

وقالت جين نوفاك إنها كتبت عن أوضاع اليمن في عدة صحف عربية ناطقة بالانجليزية مثل جريدة “آراب نيوز” السعودية، مشيرة إلى أنها تعرفت إلى قضية الخيواني عن طريق خبر نشر في “اليمن تايمز” استرعى انتباهها، “فقررت حينها أنني سأكون محاميته وصوته في الغرب”.

من جهة أخرى قالت داليا زيادة رئيسة منظمة المؤتمر الاسلامي الأمريكي إن المنظمة أدانت الثلاثاء 10-6-2008 بشدة الحكم الصادر ضد الصحافي اليمني الحائز على جائزة دولية.

وطالب ناصر ودادي مدير التوعية بالحقوق المدنية في المنظمة “بتصحيح هذا الخطأ والعفو عنه فورا، و إلا يكون النظام اليمني بذلك يؤكد قولنا بأن اليمن أكثر قسوة على الصحفيين منها على تنظيم القاعدة الإرهابي.”

Free al-Khaiwani

Jane on Al-Jazeera 2005

Filed under: Yemen, mentions — by Jane Novak at 10:27 am on Friday, June 13, 2008

The transcript of the 2005 al-Jazeera show “From Washington.” I didn’t see it online before. I should save it here at the website for reference. I can see now why it had such an impact. I ran a goggle translation which is at the end. I was rather straightforward.

The seminar: Hafez Mirzaee
ضيوف الحلقة: Diouf seminar:
- إدموند هول/ السفير الأميركي السابق لدى صنعاء — Edmund Hull / Former American ambassador to Sanaa

- جين نوفاك/ كاتبة أميركية متخصصة في الشؤون اليمنية — Jane Novak / American writer specializing in the affairs of Yemen

- أبو بكر القربي/ وزير خارجية اليمن وآخرون — Abu Bakr al-Qurbi / Minister of Foreign Affairs of Yemen and others

تاريخ الحلقة: 14/11/2005 Date Seminar: 14/11/2005

العلاقات اليمنية-الأميركية

- خلفية العلاقات اليمنية-الأميركية ووضعها الحالي
- الملف الأمني والتعاون في مكافحة الإرهاب
- تقييم وزير الخارجية اليمني للعلاقات مع أميركا

حافظ المرازي: مرحباً بكم معنا في هذه الحلقة من برنامج من واشنطن موضوعنا العلاقات اليمنية الأميركية في ضوء اللقاء الثالث بين الرئيس علي عبد الله صالح والرئيس بوش وهو اللقاء الذي تم في البيت الأبيض في الأسبوع المنصرم، سنبحث ملف هذه العلاقات؛ الموضوع الأول على أجندة هذه العلاقات مكافحة الإرهاب، ثم هناك موضوع الوضع الاقتصادي ومكافحة الفساد وأجندة واشنطن في نشر الديمقراطية هل تتعارض فيما يتعلق باليمن مع أجندتها في موضوع مكافحة الإرهاب؟ هذا ما نناقشه مع ضيوفنا في هذه الحلقة من برنامج من واشنطن.

خلفية العلاقات اليمنية-الأميركية ووضعها الحالي

[تقرير مسجل]

حافظ المرازي: كان هذا الاجتماع الثالث للرئيس اليمني مع الرئيس الأميركي منذ أحداث الحادي عشر من سبتمبر 2001 وشأن كل الزيارات ظل الموضوع الأول على أجندة العلاقات الأميركية اليمنية هو مكافحة الإرهاب والدور الذي يمكن لليمن أن يلعبه في هذا المجال. (Read on …)

The Heroine of Yemen

Filed under: mentions — by Jane Novak at 1:03 pm on Friday, June 6, 2008

Cool! Google Translation works from Portugese to Arabic, nice. This is an article published in Unica, the magazine of Expresso the largest newspaper in Portugal, published May 31. The English translation is a few posts down:

الحياة المزدوجه للجين نوفاك يلعب في المطلق الشديد. عند الخروج من الشوارع في حي في ولاية نيو جيرسي في الولايات المتحدة على الذهاب الى التسوق ، أن أحدا لن يعترف. إذا أي شيء ، للجيران ، السيدة نوفاك. نعلم ان البعض ربما لكونها صاحبة المنزل 46 عاما من وقررت اسقاط مهنة بوصفه المدير التجاري لرعايه طفلين ، كما أكد عدد منهم قد يبدو هادئا روتينيه.

ولكن بعد آلاف الاميال في أرض كان فيها من اي وقت مضى ، جميع قراء الصحف في معرفة من هو جين. في اليمن ، جين اصبحت كابوسا للنظام ، وسيكون هذا جدا في الحياة الوطنية التي يتوجب على الناس ان لا تتناول الا بالاسم. المواد هي لعقد الرئيس علي عبد الله صالح والى اقارب من كانوا معه في ادارة شؤون البلاد في ظل ديكتاتوريه مموهه هناك 27 سنة : الأخ علي أ ص الاحمر ، قائد القوة الجوية ، الاخ غير الشقيق علي محسن Al — الاحمر ، قائد المنطقة الشمالية ؛ ابنه احمد ، قائد القوات الخاصة والحرس الجمهوري ، ابن شقيق طارق ، قائد الامن المركزى ، شقيق طارق ، قائد الأمن الوطني. قائمة اقاربهم في الوظائف الرئيسية الفاي طويلة ، وابعد من المجال العسكري. (Read on …)

“The Heroine of Yemen” (President Saleh’s Nightmare): Unica, Portugal

Filed under: Yemen, mentions — by Jane Novak at 9:51 am on Wednesday, June 4, 2008

oh, Stupendous article in Unica, the magazine of Expresso the largest newspaper in Portugal, published June 7. It says Yemen has been a dictarship for 27 years in the hands of President Saleh and his family. And half the Yemeni kids are malnourished. These are important facts for the Portugese people and the rest of Europe to keep in mind. This is the google translation:

The heroine of Yemen

An American housewife, mother of two children, became a star in Middle East from her living room in New Jersey. Without ever going to Yemen, Jane Novak’s articles are shaking the regime.

The double life of Jane Novak plays in absolute extremes. When leaving the street in her neighborhood in New Jersey in the United States to go to shopping, no one will recognize her. If anything is, for the neighbours, Mrs Novak. Some possibly know that she is an owner of home of 46 years who decided to drop a career as a commercial manager to take care of two children, with whom she has an apparently tranquil routine.

But thousands of miles away in a land where ever was, all readers of newspapers know who is Jane. In Yemen, Jane has become a nightmare for the regime, going to be very present in national life that people have to deal only by name.

Her articles are held for President Ali Abdullah Saleh and to the relatives who were with him in administering the country under a dictatorship camouflaged there for 27 years: the brother Ali Saleh Al-Ahmar, commander of the air force, the half-brother Ali Mohsin Al - Ahmar, commander of the northern region; his son Ahmad, commander of special forces and Republican Guard, the nephew Tariq, commander of the central security, the brother of Tariq, commander of national security. The list of relatives in key posts is long and goes far beyond the military sphere.

Jane is not afraid to write unequivocally against clan Saleh in her blog (www.armiesofliberation.com). For now, because it will never be caught in the comfort of their home in New Jersey. The independent newspapers and opposition in Yemen know that, republicando the articles it without restrictions. A blonde woman and American is able to say a few truths that can be difficult to hear and an uncomfortable experience for those who are in power in an Arab country, closed and conservative, facing a war in the north, a civil uprising in the south and a widespread poverty, with half of the malnourished children.

Q. SAKAMAKI / REDUX

How do you Novak of New Jersey describe the making of the Yemen Jane? At first, things seemed a little naive, decided to warm. The September 11, 2001, terrorist attack on the Twin Towers of New York killed 3,500 people in the heart of the city and put the Americans in shock.

(Read on …)

“It’s like an iron curtain. The government wants the people of Yemen to stay disconnected from the world.”-Jane

Filed under: Yemen, janes articles arabic, mentions — by Jane Novak at 6:22 pm on Thursday, May 29, 2008

This is a nice article about me, Yemen and al-Khaiwani from Menassat in Lebannon. Its based on a different interview: “While they block my blog, the Jihadi Al-Qaeda web sites are working just fine in Yemen. They release the USS Cole bombers and throw journalists and even comedians in jail. It leaves me speechless. This is supposed to be a U.S. ally. I feel I have an obligation to let people know,” she said.

It takes a lot to leave me speechless.

Article in full is here and has a very cool graphic I thought.

(Read on …)

Jane on the Radio, Soon

Filed under: Yemen, mentions — by Jane Novak at 4:40 pm on Wednesday, May 28, 2008

I’m on Canada Radio One, the Canadian Broadcast System shortly, a little after 7 tonight in each time zone. The show is called “As It Happens”. I’m going to be talking about Yemen, al-Khaiwani and the whole situation. I think this is the one where I talk about the Sa’ada war, the same “crime” that al-Khaiwani is facing the death penalty for.

Please sign a letter on behalf of al-Khaiwani here.

Update: Hi CBC listeners!! Thanks for stopping by! Thats so neat.

Every major journalists orgnization is supporting al-Khaiwani, one US Congressman (Trent Franks) sent a letter to the Yemeni government, and theres a church in Brooklyn praying for him. The Irish organization Front Line Defenders joined us today. Al-Khaiwani has been nominated for the 2008 Amnesty International UK’s special award for “human rights journalist under threat”.

The Civil Rights in the Middle East activists, Hands Across the Middle East Support Alliance is helping me coordinate all the efforts. These are the people who ran the campaign for Faoud the Saudi blogger who was jailed and is now freed.

Update: Listen to the CBC radio show at this link here. Click on May 28, Part two. I thought it was great. Loved the intro…
(Read on …)

New York Times Article Arabic

Filed under: janes articles arabic, mentions — by Jane Novak at 8:05 am on Saturday, May 24, 2008

To follow, a translation of this New York Times article about me and al-Khaiwani and Yemen.

عبر التدوين الإلكتروني .. حملة تشن من غرفة الجلوس

كتب :روبرت ورث

عبدالله عبدالوهاب ناجي، محمد العريقي- ترجمة خاصة بيمنات

20مايو 2008

بيروت – لبنان

جان نوفاك، 46عاماً، ربة بيت, أم لطفلين في (نيو جرسي), لم تزر اليمن حتى الآن, لا تتحدث العربية, تعترف بشفافية أنها حتى قبل سنوات قليلة ماضية، لا تعرف شيئاً عن تلك الدولة التي مزقها النزاع في جنوب الجزيرة العربية.

ومع ذلك, إلا أن نوفاك قد أصبحت مشهورة جداً في اليمن, لدرجة أن محرري الصحف يقولون إنهم يبيعون نسخاً كثيرة إذا تصدرت صورتها – الشقراء المبتسمة- غلاف أي صحيفة. وقد تم حظرت مدونتها (نشرة إخبارية صريحة عن الشئون اليمنية). يذمها حلفاء الحكومة بشكل متكرر في الصحافة المقروءة باعتبارها عميلة أمريكية, مناصرة للملكية الشيعية، وعضو في (القاعدة), أو نوفاك الصهيونية.

وليس ثمة جريرة ارتكبتها سوى حملتها العتيدة من أجل الصحفي اليمني عبدالكريم الخيواني، الذي حمل حكومته على الغضب جراء كتابته عن تمرد دموي في أقصي شمال البلاد، وهو الآن تحت المحاكمة بتهم التحريض على العصيان، التي يمكن أن تسبب له عقوبة الموت، في قرار من المتوقع أن يصدر الأربعاء .

بادرت نوفاك، التي تعمل من حاسوب نقال في غرفة جلوسها بمقاطعة (مونماوث) “عندما يكون الأطفال في المدرسة”, بعريضة طلب على الانترنت لإطلاق سراح السيد الخيواني, وقد ضمنت فيها السياسيين والصحفيين ونشطاء حقوق الإنسان اليمنيين, وآخرين من حول العالم. أظهرت مدونتها نجاحا كبيرا لتتجاوز قضية الخيواني وتصبح مخرجا حاسماً لصحفيي المعارضة والشخصيات السياسية، الذين يؤيدون معلوماتها عبر رسائلهم النصية أو البريد الكتروني عن الدسائس السياسية اليمنية.

تقول نوفاك بأن حملتها مسألة مبدأ أساسي. وقالت: “هذا بلد يطلق سراح أعضاء القاعدة ليحاكم عوضاً عنهم صحفي، لا لشيء سوى أنه يمارس مهنته”، “وهو الجنون بعينه”.

لكن نوفاك تعترف فعلاً باهتمامها الشخصي في تلك القضية، لقد أصبحت والخيواني صديقين مقربين، رغم أنهما لم يجتمعا قط, ولا يتكلم أحدهما لغة الآخر. واحدة من التهم الموجهة ضده هي استلامه رسالة نصية عبر تليفون خلوي منها, باعتبار ذلك جزءاً من مؤامرة مزعومة، التي ينكرها بالمقابل، لمساعدة المتمردين الحوثيين في شمال اليمن. (Read on …)

NZZ: A Nervous Yemen

Filed under: mentions — by Jane Novak at 5:33 am on Thursday, May 22, 2008

From the Swiss paper Neue Zürcher Zeitung (NZZ), a major German language Swiss daily newspaper based in Zürich known as the Swiss newspaper of record. (This is a translation from the German to English, with thanks to the very nice Marcus.) Its wonderful:

From the Living Room, A Government Much Nervous

A housewife from New Jersey interferes in Yemen

If a newspaper in Yemen wants to sell more copies, it publishes a picture of Jane Novak. The 46 year old American housewife and mother of two children has reached surprising popularity in the southern Arabic country. All because of her Internet Blog. For the Yemeni government she has become something like enemy of the state number one.

The descriptions and names of Jane Novak are diverse: A member of al-kaida, an American secret agent, a Shiite monarchist, a Zionist - that’s what representatives from the Yemeni Government have called the women on different occasions. A women which sits some thousand kilometers away on a different continent, in front of her a Laptop-Computer blogging, assumed her children are in school and she has time at the moment.

The 46 year old housewife out of the American state of New Jersey openly admits to have known almost nothing about Yemen just a few years ago. In the meantime she is known in Yemen by her given name “Jane”. Also she possibly is the best known foreigner in the country even though the opinions about her greatly differ. Already the name and the graphical design of her Website, in the colors of the American flag ought to be enough to get the blood of Islamists and Arabic governments rushing through their veins.

Everything began with a petition

Everything began in the year 2004 with a petition to free the Yemenite journalist Karim al-Khaiwani. Khaiwani had attracted his governments anger, because he dared to write about a rebellion in the north of the country. He was charged with high treason and theoretically he has to fear the death penalty.

Out of the simple appeal on the Internet developed a Blog, which stood at the beginning of a campaign whose momentum holds steadily. The Website has developed into a kind of bulletin board for Journalists which are particular near to the countries opposition and oppositional politicians. They send emails which provide new information and make the blog into more than the hobby of a dilettante. One thing lead to another: But mainly the Yemeni government made the mistake to created the concept of the enemy “Jane” which made her an icon. By now Novak also publishes in the English “Yemen Times”. Her articles show a considerable knowledge of the inner workings.

Talk guest on “al-Jazira”

2005 Novak was a first time guest in a discussion on the arabic television station al-Jazeeza. When it was the speaker of the Yemeni governments turn he began with a tirade against Novak: “You do not speak Arabic, you never were in Yemen and you aren’t even a journalist. Everything you have is a website you are using to smear Yemen.”

No “normal” activist

Reading her biography the 46 year old doesn’t really fit the picture of an activist who fights for the rights of people in an exotic country. According to “The New York Times” she was working as sales manager for a textile company before she became a mother. When a Yemeni Minister visited Washington last year he offered to meet “Jane”. She refused because the trip to Washington was too expensive and the complications in securing the supervision for her children.

Bloody conflict

Through her campaign Novak was sucked into one of the least known and most complex conflicts in the middle east. In the southern Arabic country, which formerly was divided into Northern and Southern Yemen, a rebellion of tribes in the north west has existed for years. The rebels which are located near the border to Saudi Arabia are fighting against the central government who accuses the rebels of being supported by Iran. The death toll is located in the thousands. The Journalist Karim al-Khaiwani whom Novak supports wrote, in spite of an official embargo, about the conflict on his website. This was the reason for the charge against him.

The Yemeni government accuses him of being a supporter of the “Terrorists”, which is the government’s portrayal of the rebels. According to Novak this is a bitter irony because the stance of the regime on this subject has to be called ambivalent. Numerous prisoners which were incarcerated because there existed the suspicion of ties to al-Kaida have been freed in spite of protests from the West. The twilight of the global terror networks also lies on the small country on the southern tip of the Arabic peninsula. The definition of friend and foe is seldom definite.

Novak is convinced that al-Khaiwani is on the right side . The two have never met but are still corresponding by email. By the way, it took Novak months until Novak confessed to her protégé that she isn’t a Journalist but a housewife with a Laptop at home.

Amerikanische Hausfrau, Yes

Filed under: mentions — by Jane Novak at 8:15 am on Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Hello NZZ readers!!!! Alles begann mit einer Petition! (click this, please)

Wow, a lot of people are signing. Thank you very much for that. Read Karim’s letter right below this, I moved it up for you. He’s a wonderful guy, quite heroic, and well worth the fight.

Wow, the blog is getting a lot of traffic from this article in NZZ:

Wenn in Jemen eine Zeitung ihre Auflage steigern möchte, dann bringt sie auf ihrer Titelseite ein Bild von Jane Novak. Die 46-jährige amerikanische Hausfrau und Mutter von zwei Kindern hat es in dem südarabischen Land dank ihrem Internet-Blog zu erstaunlicher Berühmtheit gebracht. Für die dortige Regierung ist sie eine Art Staatsfeind Nummer eins geworden.

bbu. Die Bezeichnungen für Jane Novak sind sehr vielseitig: Ein Mitglied von al-Kaida, eine amerikanische Agentin, eine schiitische Monarchistin, eine Zionistin (ed: Its even funny in a foreign language.) - so haben Vetreter der Regierung Jemens bei verschiedenen Gelegenheiten die Frau bezeichnet, die einige tausend Kilometer entfernt auf einem anderen Kontinent an ihrem Laptop-Computer sitzt und bloggt. Vorausgesetzt, ihre Kinder sind in der Schule und sie hat gerade dazu Zeit.

(Read on …)

Full Article from the New York Times

Filed under: Yemen, mentions — by Jane Novak at 4:57 pm on Tuesday, May 20, 2008

New York Times

May 20, 2008
A Living-Room Crusade via Blogging
By ROBERT F. WORTH
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Jane Novak, a 46-year-old stay-at-home mother of two in New Jersey, has never been to Yemen. She speaks no Arabic, and freely admits that until a few years ago, she knew nothing about that strife-torn south Arabian country.

(Read on …)

Websites (mostly US) Carrying the Case of al-Khaiwani

Filed under: USA, Yemen, Yemen-Journalists, guest posts, mentions — by Jane Novak at 1:24 am on Monday, May 19, 2008

This is a second list. (List #one is here and is a seperate listing.) Please join us and sign at this link in support of the heroic journalist, Abdulkarim al-Khaiwani. If you have a link, please leave it in the comments. Thanks AGAIN to Nicki for keeping track of this today…. Update: 1001 people sent a letter so far. Its a beautiful thing.

CPJ Report on Yemen: They beat-up journalists and banned my blog

Filed under: Media, Yemen, mentions — by Jane Novak at 12:14 pm on Wednesday, February 6, 2008

The CPJ does such good work.

And yes, I am a critical blogger banned in Yemen. I have a tee shirt to prove it.

News Yemen

In its report “Attacks on Press in 2007 in Middle East and North Africa”, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)criticized the situation of press and violent actions by the government against journalists:

The Journalists covering a rebel insurgency and government corruption were subjected to a frightening array of violent attacks and politically motivated court cases. Threats against independent journalists continued at an alarming rate, taking on an almost routine air. Perpetrators, for the most part, went unpunished.

Since 2004, the government has been combating a regional insurgency led by tribal and religious figures in the northwestern Saada region. Until a tenuous cease-fire was reached in June, hundreds of civilians had been killed and thousands displaced during the three-year conflict. Yemeni authorities continued to respond aggressively toward journalists who tried to report independently on the fighting. Government forces prevented journalists from entering the region to cover the conflict, effectively imposing a media blackout.

At least one journalist became ensnared in the government’s attempt to stop coverage of the conflict. In June, in one of the year’s most troubling press freedom incidents, Yemeni authorities stormed the home of Abdel Karim al-Khaiwani, editor of an opposition news Web site and former editor of the online newspaper Al-Shoura. Al-Khaiwani was hauled before a State Security Court on vague terrorism charges that carried a possible death penalty.

In court, the government made a slew of unsubstantiated accusations, reinforcing the belief among Yemeni journalists and political observers that the editor’s
arrest was an attempt to punish him for his unrelenting criticism of the fight against rebels in Saada, as well as his writing about government nepotism. The preliminary evidence against al-Khaiwani consisted of photographs of the fighting in Saada, an interview and contact with a rebel leader, and news articles, including one written by al-Khaiwani that criticized President Ali Abdullah Saleh.

Al-Khaiwani’s case took a dangerous twist in July when, following his release pending trial, several gunmen abducted him as he attempted to hail a taxi. The assailants threatened him, beat him, and tried to break his fingers, CPJ sources said. The gunmen also threatened to kill the journalist and his family if he wrote another word against the president or the country’s national unity, those sources said.

A spike in attacks against journalists corresponded with the independent media’s increasing assertiveness. During the last three years, opposition newspapers have smashed political taboos by criticizing rampant government corruption, the war in Saada, Saleh’s policies, and the president’s perceived plan to have his son Ahmed succeed him. Though small in circulation, these papers represent one the few avenues of dissent in Yemen, where political parties are weak and electronic media are firmly under the state’s control.

Editor-in-Chief Naif Hassan of the independent weekly Al-Sharaa told CPJ that, in August, several armed men in two army jeeps with military license plates stormed the paper’s offices and threatened to kill him. It was unclear what prompted the raid, although journalists at the paper suspect it was connected to a recent criminal complaint filed by the Yemeni Ministry of Defense over Al-Sharaa’s coverage of the conflict in Saada.

In March, armed men accosted freelance columnist Mohamed al-Maqaleh on a street in the capital, Sana’a, holding him at gunpoint and warning him against criticizing the government in his writings. On September 2, Omar Bin Fareed, a columnist for the Aden-based daily Al-Ayyam, was abducted by gunmen as he sat at a restaurant eating dinner; the assailants grabbed Fareed, shoved him into a waiting car, and beat him for several hours before dumping him in the desert in the early hours of the morning. Al-Ayyam reported that it traced one of the cars used in the assault to the office of a local military commander. Fareed said he believed the abduction was in reprisal for his writings about local officials.

The government has been under increasing domestic pressure, with a debilitated economy, a restive rural population, declining living standards, and high unemployment. Police attacked or barred journalists trying to report on the rising number of public protests. As in past years, Yemeni officials failed to issue public expressions of concern over these violent attacks against the press. On the contrary, it denied any problems existed.

Columnist al-Maqaleh, Abdullah al-Wazeer, editor-in-chief of the weekly Al-Balagh, and Saddam al-Ashmouri, a freelance reporter for the English-language weekly Yemen Times, were assaulted by security forces in October while covering an opposition rally in Sana’a. Al-Ayyam reported a spike in attacks on its journalists beginning in May, with several reporters beaten, detained, and threatened. Security forces seized cameras from its reporters and barred them from covering protests. In May, municipal security guards visited Al-Ayyam reporter Abdul Hafez Mugab at his office and threatened him over his coverage of alleged financial corruption in the local government.

Those who abducted and attacked journalists enjoyed widespread impunity for their actions, as they had in the past. In January, CPJ wrote to Saleh one year after his government pledged to a CPJ delegation visiting Sana’a that it would investigate the brutal assaults against the press. A year later, however, those responsible for the attacks continued to evade justice. Government investigations have been incomplete or not seriously pursued, CPJ research shows. In only two of the five cases that CPJ brought to the government’s attention did authorities identify suspects and initiate legal action. One of those cases was dismissed, and the other was pending in late year, with the suspects free.

Outspoken journalists continued to face the threat of judicial harassment in politically motivated court cases. Yemen’s judiciary—which is headed by the president—is not independent, and outspoken journalists are often at the mercy of politicized judges. Under Yemen’s harsh press law, penal code, and other statutes, journalists face prison terms, fines, and professional bans in connection with their published work. Coverage of corruption and nepotism frequently triggers judicial retaliation.

In an unusual move, one case was referred to the prosecutor’s office specializing in national security and terrorism cases. On July 7, the Ministry of Defense filed a complaint against the weekly Al-Sharaa after the paper published a controversial series on the conflict in Saada that alleged, among other things, that a known terrorist group was fighting alongside the Yemeni army and training tribal volunteers to fight in the conflict. An editor and two reporters faced several years in jail.

The government retained its firm grip over the influential broadcast media, which continued to strictly reflect government views. Cyberspace became a forum for independent news, but the government increasingly censored content. Authorities banned several news sites and chat forums during the year. According to the Yemeni Journalists Syndicate, authorities blocked access to the news sites Al-Shoura and Aleshteraki because of their reports on the conflict in Saada. The daily Al-Ayyam reported that access to its Web site was briefly blocked within Yemen on September 2.

Critical bloggers, including those based outside the country, were also censored. Access to U.S. journalist Jane Novak’s Web site, Armiesofliberation, which is frequently critical of the Yemeni government, was repeatedly blocked inside Yemen.

CPJ Report on Press Freedom in Yemen

Filed under: Civil Rights, Media, Reform, Yemen, mentions — by Jane Novak at 6:13 pm on Wednesday, January 9, 2008

Yemen Observer

Journalists covering rebel insurgencies and government corruption were subject to a frightening array of violent attacks and politically-motivated court cases, said a new 2007 report issued by the Committee to Protect Journalists. “Threats against independent journalists continued at an alarming rate, taking on an almost routine air. Perpetrators, for the most part, went unpunished,” the report stated.

The report said that since 2004, the Yemeni government has been combating a regional insurgency led by tribal and religious figures in the northwestern Sa’ada region of the country. It added that until a tenuous cease-fire was reached in June, hundreds of civilians had been killed and thousands displaced during the three-year conflict.

“Yemeni authorities continued to respond aggressively toward journalists who tried to report independently on the fighting,” the report said. “Government forces prevented journalists from entering the region to cover the conflict, effectively imposing a media blackout.”

According to the CPJ report 2007, a spike in attacks against journalists corresponded with the independent media’s increasing assertiveness. During the last three years, opposition newspapers smashed political taboos by criticizing rampant government corruption, the war in Sa’ada, Saleh’s policies, and the president’s perceived plan to have his son Ahmed succeed him. “Though small in circulation, these papers represent one the few avenues of dissent in Yemen, where political parties are weak and electronic media are firmly under the state’s control,” said the report.

The report also mentioned some attacks on a number of journalists such as Abdul-Karim al-Khaiwani,

Yemeni journalist and editor-in-chief of the independent weekly Al-Sharaa, Naif Hassan.

The government has been under increasing domestic pressure, with a debilitated economy, a restive rural population, declining living standards and high unemployment, according to the CPJ report. “Police attacked or barred journalists trying to report on the rising number of public protests. As in past years, Yemeni officials failed to issue public expressions of concern over these violent attacks against the press. On the contrary, it denied any problems existed.”

Columnist al-Maqaleh, editor-in-chief of the weekly Al-Balagh, Abdullah al-Wazeer, and Saddam al-Ashmouri, a freelance reporter for the English-language weekly Yemen Times, were assaulted by security forces in October while covering an opposition rally in Sana’a.

In January, the report said that CPJ wrote to Saleh one year after his government pledged to a CPJ delegation visiting Sana’a that it would investigate the brutal assaults against the press.

A year later, however, those responsible for the attacks continued to evade justice. Government investigations have been incomplete or not seriously pursued, CPJ research shows. In only two of the five cases that CPJ brought to the government’s attention did authorities identify suspects and initiate legal action. One of those cases was dismissed, and the other was still pending in late in the year, with the suspects free.

Outspoken journalists continued to face the threat of judicial harassment in politically motivated court cases. Yemen’s judiciary—which is headed by the president—is not independent, and outspoken journalists are often at the mercy of politicized judges. Under Yemen’s harsh press law, penal code, and other statutes, journalists face prison terms, fines and professional bans in connection with their published work. Coverage of corruption and nepotism frequently triggers judicial retaliation.

Some of news websites are also blocked, according to the report. Critical bloggers, including those based outside the country, were also censored. Access to U.S. journalist Jane Novak’s website, Armiesofliberation, which is frequently critical of the Yemeni government, was repeatedly blocked inside Yemen.

Chief Coordinator of the International Committee to Protect Journalists, Joel Campagna, commented during a press conference in Cairo at which the report was released that 2007 could be considered the worst year for journalists in the last decade. About 65 journalists were killed last year, half of them in Iraq.

Campagna disclosed that for the fifth consecutive year Iraq is the worst and most dangerous area in which a journalist can work, and the worst in the history of modern journalism. “Journalism in Iraq remains one of the most dangerous professions in the world,” added the Executive Director of the Committee to Protect Journalists, Joel Simon.

Accusing Arab governments of seeking to stifle the independent press, and of the prosecution of independent journalists. Campagna disclosed that governments are using new methods to suppress freedom of opinion, including wires and roundabout ways. He showed that other parties have filed lawsuits to establish defamation issues, as well as journalists have been falsely charged with terrorism, as in the arrest of journalist Abdul Karim al-Khaiwani, allegedly belonging to a terrorist cell.

Saeed Thabet, deputy of head of the Yemeni Journalists Syndicate, stated that there has been a reduction in the arrest of journalists during the three past years, but added that “freedom issues witness all kinds of abuses such as the blocking of the news websites.” “

The CPJ report lists the violations and attacks that happened in Yemen,” Thabet said, adding that this was a good thing. “But the government attacks against journalists are still going on in the field of press freedom violations, and this is the worst.”

Footnotes for CAC Report

Filed under: Yemen, mentions — by Jane Novak at 7:03 am on Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Freedom House Countires at the Crossroad notes 2007

Notes
1 “Yemen: Year in Brief 2005 - A Chronology of Democratic Developments,” IRIN-news.org, 10 January 2006, http://www.irinnews.org/print.asp?ReportID=51014, accessed 27 June 2006.
2 “Election Guide” (Washington, D.C: Electionworld.org and International Foundation for Election Systems [IFES]), http://www.ifes.org and http://electionguide.org.
3 “Yemen at a Glance,” Arab Political Systems: Baseline Information and Reform - Yemen (Washington, D.C.: Carnegie Endowment for Peace, 2005), 19, 21, http://www.carnegie endowment.org/?les/Yemen_APS.doc, accessed 28 June 2006.
4 “Preliminary Statement of the NDI International Election Observer Delegation to Yemen’s April 27 Legislative Elections” (Washington, D.C.: National Democratic Instiᆲtute for International Affairs [NDI], 29 April 2003), 4, http://www.accessdemocracy.org/ library/1584_ye_election03.pdf, accessed 3 July 2006.
5 Interview with representatives from NDI and the IFES, Sanaa, 27 September 2003.
6 Ibid.
7 Interview with Ahmed Al-Sufi and Abdullah Sallam Al-Hakimi of the Yemen Institute for Development of Democracy (YIDD), Sanaa, 25 September 2003.
8 “Preliminary Statement of the NDI,” 1.
9 Ibid., 5.
10 Interview with Abdul Majed Al-Fahed, Executive Director of the Civic Democratic Iniᆲtiative Support Foundation (CDF), Sanaa, 26 September 2003.
11 “Yemen’s Constitutional Referendum and Local Elections” (New York: Human Rights Watch [HRW], February 2001).
12 Interview with Amat Al-Aleem Al-Soswa, Yemen’s Minister of Human Rights, Washᆲington, D.C., 10 September 2003.
13 Ziad Majed, et al., Building Democracy in Yemen: Women’s Political Participation, Political Party Life, and Democratic Elections (Stockholm: International Institute for Democᆲracy and Electoral Assistance [IDEA], 2005), 13.
14 “Review of the Annual Strategic Report: Yemen 2002-2003″ (Sanaa: General Center for Studies, Research, and Publishing, 2003).
15 Mujahed Al-Mussa’abi, “National Committee for Women: Challenges & Future,” Yemen Times, 18-24 November 2002.
16 Interview with Rashida Al-Hamdani, Chairperson of the Women’s National Committee, Sanaa, 28 September 2003.
17 “YEMEN: New System to Eliminate Thousands of “Ghost” Civil Servants,” IRIN-news.com (New York: UN Of?ce for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, 12 Sepᆲtember 2005).
18 Joel Campagna, “Attacks, Censorship, and Dirty Tricks: In Yemen, the Press Climate is Deteriorating” (New York: Committee to Protect Journalists [CPJ], 9 March 2006), 1, http://www.cpj.org/Brie?ngs/2006/yemen_3-06/yemen_3-06_printer.html, accessed 26 June 2006. (Read on …)

After Interview with Me, Yemen Revokes MP Hashid’s Immunity

Filed under: GPC, Interviews, Parliament, Targeting, Yemen, mentions, prisons — by Jane Novak at 10:37 am on Monday, December 10, 2007

The Yemen Times, SANA’A, Dec. 8 — Last week, the Yemeni Parliament agreed to rescind Parliament member (MP) Ahmed Saif Hashid’s immunity, claiming that Hashid paid visits to prisons and revealed illegal actions that go against the constitution, Yemeni laws and international conventions.

ahmed saif hashed.jpg

Previous activities made by Hashid resulted in his arrest in the political security prison, followed by imprisonment under the Immigration and Passports Authority. Hashid’s chauffeur was also killed in the street, with his camera and cell phone confiscated. Referring to these incidents, Hashid asked, “What kind of immunity are they talking about?”

Many MPs affiliated with the ruling party (GPC) demanded last week to rescind Hashid’s immunity. The parliament agreed to do so. Hashid considered the revoking of his immunity by Parliament an action targeting him and his human rights activities.

Jane Novak, an American researcher, interviewed Hashid, addressing issues related to human rights, freedom, prisons, and inmates in Yemen. The interview was downloaded onto many news websites, enraging a lot of people.

You would think Parliament would be enraged by the torture of Yemeni children in jail, not by the guy who is trying to save them.

The Banned in Yemen tee shirts say “Ali Saleh is Afraid of a Blog”, but really they are afraid of the truth.

Take a look at the category, Prisons. The offending interview is there, as well as a lot of other reports.

Freedom House 2007

Filed under: Civil Rights, Yemen, mentions — by Jane Novak at 6:01 am on Sunday, December 2, 2007

Freedom House 2007

Notes
1 “Yemen: Year in Brief 2005 - A Chronology of Democratic Developments,” IRIN-news.org, 10 January 2006, http://www.irinnews.org/print.asp?ReportID=51014, accessed 27 June 2006.
2 “Election Guide” (Washington, D.C: Electionworld.org and International Foundation for Election Systems [IFES]), http://www.ifes.org and http://electionguide.org.

(Read on …)

Yemen Times Wins Free Media Award

Filed under: Yemen, mentions — by Jane Novak at 9:40 pm on Monday, February 12, 2007

IFEX

YEMENI NEWSPAPER WINS “FREE MEDIA PIONEER” AWARD

Yemen’s most widely-read English-language newspaper is to be honoured with a press freedom prize at the International Press Institute’s (IPI) congress in Edinburgh, Scotland on 30 May 2006. The “Yemen Times” has been named the winner of the 2006 Free Media Pioneer Award.

Founded in 1990 by Professor Abdulaziz Al-Saqqaf, a prominent economist and human rights activist who died in 1999, the “Yemen Times” has provided accurate and timely news and information on Yemen and the region, and actively participates in efforts to support press freedom, human rights and democracy, says IPI.

The independent paper operates in a country whose government is known for its harsh restrictions on the media. Self-censorship is common and violent attacks against journalists are on the rise, IPI notes.

Created in 1996, the Free Media Pioneer Award honours individuals or organisations that fight against great odds to ensure freer and more independent media in their country or region. The award is co-sponsored by Freedom Forum.

Visit these links:
- IPI: http://www.freemedia.at/Protests2006/pr_pioneer05.05.06.htm
- Yemen Times: http://yementimes.com/
- IFEX Alerts on Yemen: http://www.ifex.org/en/content/view/full/232/
- Freedom House Backgrounder on Yemen: http://www.freedomhouse.org/template.cfm?page=22&year=2005&country=6864
- Censorship in Yemen: http://www.worldpress.org/Mideast/2264.cfm

Jane Novak and the Democracy of Waq al-Waq

Filed under: Yemen, mentions — by Jane Novak at 9:34 pm on Thursday, December 15, 2005

This article was written by someone inYemen who I didn’t know but who apparently knows me. It was translated from Arabic.

Update: So of course they are saying I orchestrated this article myself (from the comments): “May be Novak Asked him to write that to make her picture better in Yemen. It is the fact only.”

Jane Novak and the Democracy of Waq Al-Waq
By Mohammad Ezz Addeen
12 Dec, 2005

There are many who interested on writing about the Yemeni affairs. But only few of them who put the hand on the defectiveness places to diagnosing the situation in the country. May be the American journalist and political analyst Jane Novak taking advanced position on the experts list of the Yemeni cases. However, she is new epoch in interesting the Yemeni Affaires.

There is no dubiety that the media campaign against Novak powered by the governmental and rule party media and others which orb in it’s falk supported it’s thesis. It was busy with attacking Novak and harassing her instead of explaining the wrong thing in which she was talking about. It was thinking that in this way they will kill her theses against the corruption in the state.

Novak experience appeared through what she effecting and thrilling the official speech, which became known for all people nearly three weeks ago on «from Washington» show on the channel of Aljazeera. It became known the level of the governmental speech in Yemen for all around the world. The women did not gave anything new. She talked about gross (overall) of reports, news, studies, and writing that she referred to, and reproduced it in organized way. However, many opposition politicals, journalists, and public had written and spoken about different subjects more explicit than her. She collect all at one and produce it all at once without any consideration of redlines or being afraid from the official investigation. Also I think the foreign kink [or gnarl] participating in raising her ideas for the authority and the opposition. Especially that no one spoke seriously in the same serious and focus way that she did in a small period.

The «accusations kitchen» is not incompetent to insulting her. As the treason, stooge, and separatist are formal accuses for the opposition political and journalists, when they are talking about the corruption and reform, particularly this days. Novak got accuses something different to be corresponding with her state. She is Zionist, Free Mason, jobless, or [the one who work for money], who the USA Newspaper did not digested her articles, but she found a free space to publish it in the Yemen’s democracy fame of 170 Newspaper and only one Channel which became feudalist only for the authority and the rule party, and did not open it’s doors to hosting (receiving) oppositional members.

The attacks against Novak gave many services for her. It make her sure that she is in the truth bath after she received thanks and supporting letters from whom become interested on her opinions and make her on the front because of the media campaign. However, she was trending to praise the president Saleh and gave soft criticize for some actions discordant to his ambition [some thing he want to do].

I am not hiding the fact that the governmental media kails my attention to this woman. It also encourage me to search about her articles about Yemen, Iraq, Palestine and the Arab countries to stricture the accuses and try to know more about her, with the help of my weak English supported by many dictionaries to translating the Article not published in Arabic in Yemen.

The Beginning

Novak started writing articles, and she became more interested on the Middle East affaires after the attacks of 11 sep. she found that most of the terrorists were from this region. Then she focus on Yemen synchronizing with the growing democracy conference held in Sana’a on January 2004.

She noted that the prohibiting of the journalists and Non gov Orgs to participate on the conference is disaccording with the democratic ethics that Yemen goes through. Yemen was the typical sample of the growing democracies on the region.

Novak quoted a phrase of the president speech in the opening session of the conference. In her articles after the conference, She was point that president Saleh said that the democracy is the rescue ship for the regimes, and it is the choice for all people. In addition, she was criticized softly the abuses that may happened in the democracies, even it disaccording with that she was thinking Saleh is supporting it.

The Ship Sinking

When Al-khaiwani went to the jail, Novak began writing about his case. She was representing the American view that the society health and avoid the terror is with the free speech.

So Al-khaiwani’s jailing disaccording with the democratic principles that the president is caring about.

In most her article about AL-khaiwani’s case, she was appealing Saleh to interference to release him. At that time, she was not know the unlimited authorities of the president, which include Justice, Army forces, media, and others that she talked about in the show. She was only appealing Saleh mindful of the ship to not be sinking in the typical democracy in the region.

May be the president media secretary still remember that his English paper (Yemen observer) published an article entitled (Yemen in the spring) for the (jobless, and [the one who work for money]). It talked about the terror and the possibility of transferring the terrorists to Yemen if there was real democracy in Iraq. She quoted that from Zarqawi statement when he said that if the Iraqi Gov take control allover Iraq, and the occupation left it. Then he’ll leave to another country. So Novak said that the other country may be Yemen, because it suffering for the freedom, jailing journalists, and narrowing of the press freedom, which make the state wild environment for the terror growing, where the terrorists are exploiting the lack of freedom and the hate for the regimes to achieve their goals. However, she did not forget to mentions the rescue ship that Saleh talked about.

For knowledge, Novak was getting up in different times from the midnight to Al-fajr [aurora time or daybreak] when it is the time of the day broken in Yemen. She could not wait to the New Jersey morning (afternoon in Yemen) to read what she was expecting that the news’ll say about the releasing of Al-khaiwani. So these times became a habit for her that she was getting up even after the releasing of Al-khaiwani by presidential feted. She talked about this point in her blog. So we should understand that the different between the time zone of Sana’a and New Jersey is means the different between the human and the one who works for money.

With continuing of the trail drolly of Al-khaiwani and attacking the lawyers and the journalist in the court, Jane released that the ship is sinking in the corruption which is the ruler, and no existence of some thing named law.

The democracy and the unicorn in Yemen, and the justice in Yemen, which published in Al-wasat News paper, in these articles she announces her actual oppose for the Yemeni regime representing by president Saleh .

Both articles were the beginning of Novak getting out all her hate against corruption and rights abuses and freedom theft in Yemen.

Novak and Sistani

(Read on …)

“The Ball is in the Court of Ms Novak to Prove her Credibility”

Filed under: Yemen, mentions — by Jane Novak at 8:55 am on Monday, November 28, 2005

No I don’t think so. Im starting to think I put a hole in the net.

So I’m scanning through the Yemen Times’ translations of editorials in the local press and come across this from al-Mithaq, the major paper of Ali Saleh’s ruling party, the GPC.

So on the now inf