Armies of Liberation

Jane Novak's blog about Yemen

al-Khamiri’s Home Attacked Again

Filed under: Targeted Individuals, Yemen, Yemen-Economy — by Jane Novak at 8:55 am on Monday, April 10, 2006

Anonymous men opened fire on the residence of Tawfiq Al-Khamiri, secretary general of the hotels union and deputy prime minister for businessmen and investors as well as head of the administrative council for hotels and investment.
The security forces did not proffer any information to NewsYemen. Al-Khamiri however told NewsYemen that there have been no results from the investigation of last Wednesday’s attack. He refused to blame anyone in particular. “How can the government call for foreign investment constantly and they are unable to prevent such an attack like this. We are in the center of the capital for heaven’s sake!”
Al-Khamiri’s home sustained an attack last week.

News Yemen

Cars, loans for cars

Filed under: Yemen, Yemen-Economy — by Jane Novak at 8:52 am on Monday, April 10, 2006

The parliament has ratified a decision to add a sum of 550M YR to the budget for 2006 thus making it total 3.6B YR. It also ratified the concluded loan agreement with the Bank for Development and Agriculture which totaled 9.8M dollars in order to fund a project in the governorate of Al-Dalie. It had previously refused to ratify the agreement on Wednesday due to the belief that the loan would not be profitable in its current distribution (69% for the project and 31% to buy new cars).
The deputy prime minister, Yahya Al-Rai, confirmed the agriculture minister’s commitment to abide by the amendments and asked the agriculture committee to follow up on the execution of the loan.
Concerning the increase in the budget, MPs will receive 90K YR more in addition to the monthly 200K YR.

News Yemen

Hostile Take-over in Ibb

Filed under: Targeted Individuals, Yemen, Yemen-Corruption, Yemen-Economy — by Jane Novak at 8:06 am on Monday, April 10, 2006

In the US, when one company wants to take ownership of another company, they go and buy a lot of shares until they have a majority ownership stake; in Yemen when someone wants to takeover a company, they send armed men to the location while persuading the local officials not to intervene. This also the proceedure to gain possession of land and houses.

IBB, April 9 — The National Company for Mineral Water in Al-Siani, Ibb was attacked by armed individuals in a military car. Dressed in civilian clothes, five men threatened employees with death and blowing up the factory unless they left and wrote a document confirming the factory’s seizure.

According to Yahya Al-Siani, general manager of the factory’s external relations, the armed men first threatened to kill the guards unless they opened the gates, insulting them and calling them swine. They then stormed the factory and attacked employee Yousef Abdulqadir, the factory’s chief accountant.

The attackers alleged that they were doing this because the factory was theirs, as their sheikh, Ali Hizam Al-Buslani, had bought it from businessman Tawfeek Abdurahim Mutahar. They said they were sent to close the factory for an indefinite time.

Factory administration reported the incident to Al-Siani security headquarters, which sent an armed military vehicle with some soldiers. According to factory workers, the soldiers took the five attackers and some of factory employees for questioning.

Al-Siani said all factory employees were interrogated; however, security questioned only three of the attackers, who seemed to have outside intervention. They left Al-Siani area within a few hours of questioning, affirming that they will return with their whole tribe to seize the factory.

Al-Siani confirmed that the region’s security commander, Col. Ali Abu Ghanim, seems to be plotting with the men, as they are from his area of ‘Arhab.’ According to Al-Siani, Ghanim released them on a written pledge to return Saturday, but they did not. Al-Siani added that a petition was submitted to the governor and the governorate security administration, which directed Ghanim to take necessary measures. However, according to Al-Siani, he did nothing.

The mineral water company was established two years ago under the name “Biladi” in a partnership between Salahadeen Group of companies with 75 percent of shares, Mutahar with four percent and the remaining 21 percent for local area residents. According to the factory’s public relations, it is not confirmed yet whether Mutahar sold his shares.

Yemen Times

71 MIllion into Markets

Filed under: Yemen, Yemen-Economy — by Jane Novak at 8:31 am on Friday, April 7, 2006

What does that mean, the prices were falling so they bought some shares? The headlines says stock markets, the article says local markets.

YO

The Central Bank of Yemen (CBY) had to pump US$ 71 million into local markets to keep exchange rates balanced, Saba news reported. An official source in the bank said that the CBY would continue monitoring local financial markets, and supply them with hard currency when necessary to achieve financial stability.

2 Billion Discrepency

Filed under: Yemen, Yemen-Corruption, Yemen-Economy — by Jane Novak at 4:17 pm on Sunday, March 26, 2006

between the market price of oil and that accounted for in the budget. The accounting is at $40.00/barrel and the market prices is $60.00/barrel. (not to mention the amountof public money lost by smuggling) From News Yemen.

MP Ali Ashal criticized the discrepancies in the official report the government submitted concerning oil revenues. He stated such discrepancies are a tool to confuse the public.
A member of the committee for development and oil stated that the statistics provided by the Central Yemen Bank for the month of January show a total production of 5.11 million barrels thus bringing the year-end total to 60 million barrels. The government predicts that this year’s total will be 39.6 million barrels, a decrease of 21 million from the year previous. It has calculated price per barrel at $40 despite the world market price of $60.
The report indicated that the budget for the year 2006 from oil exports is expected to exceed 3.6B dollars, i.e. the difference in price will exceed 2B dollars. The government does not interact with these resources a fact which was taken into account. It was accused of building a budget based on a deficit and “that is not true in most cases.” Ashal clarifies that since 2001 parliament has demanded that this price difference be made available to the future generations and to build more infrastructure. However, this money has been going into the pockets of the corrupt. Mr. Ashal also stated that the oversight committee is unable to produce the real number of government revenue from oil.
Mr. Ashal based his claims on the monopoly of the centers of power over information and their blinding of the truth.
A member on the committee for development and oil confirmed that there was a lack of transparency based on the discrepancies in the central bank’s report. Sakhar Al-Wajih talked about the differences in oil price and stated “the institutions in our country don’t know anything because we are not a state of institutions. Our institutions are only decoration for the world.” He also criticized the government for using the 2B dollars to strengthen security at a time when “the man in the street fears the man in the uniform.”
Ahmed Al-Sharabi, a leader in the GPC, asked those present to not condemn the situation “because it is a difficult situation and people’s feelings are provoked. He stated the “the amount of oil in our country is small and our corruption is big. In other countries the sheer amount of oil covers the size of corruption.”

Related: Yemen seeks 300 million loan from China as some MPs call for some controls on international loans and their dispursement: “The joint council also recommended that the government be bound to not use the revenue from the loans for purposes other than those previously agreed upon….Mohammed Al-Saqaaf called for a clause in the loan law barring the government from buying cars and furniture with loan monies.”

“On the Dagger’s Edge”

Filed under: Yemen, Yemen-Corruption, Yemen-Democracy, Yemen-Economy, Yemen-Election, Yemen-Journalists — by Jane Novak at 12:46 pm on Sunday, March 5, 2006

Quite an interesting seven page article in the US News and World Report, lots of interesting quotes, covers the big topics: poverty, corruption, lack of oppostion leadership, journalists, the tribal areas, education, traditionalism, potential state failure, democratic reforms, counter terrorism efforts and the impending election. To follow is an assortment of random quotes from the article:

This time, the assault is an exercise, but Yemen’s elite Counterterrorism Unit has successfully carried out several high-risk operations against suspected terrorists and kidnappers. Portraits of six fallen soldiers, the unit’s “martyrs,” hang on the walls of their barracks. “They are without a doubt the bravest guys I have ever worked with,” says Ed, a U.S. Army trainer on his second tour in Yemen.

These days, though, Yemen is facing its own crisis, the result of deepening poverty and a government in denial about the depth of reforms needed to survive. In the past year, the United States and the World Bank have slashed their modest aid programs to Yemen, increasingly fed up with a bureaucracy that is one of the most corrupt in the world. “Yemen is teetering on the edge of failed statehood,” warns one U.S. official. “It will either become a Somalia or get serious about transforming.” For a nation awash in guns and crisscrossed by well-worn smuggling routes, the threat is grave.

(The 17) The group was captured after U.S. intelligence passed a tip to Yemeni security forces.

“This is a country that is really in the balance,” says Thomas Krajeski, the U.S. ambassador to Yemen. “There is a risk here for failure, and there is a chance of success. It is our job to give them all the help we can, but they have to make some hard decisions now.”

Increasingly, however, Yemenis fear that the strongman who has ruled for 28 years will be unable or unwilling to make the tough reforms needed. “The Americans are happy because they found someone who will fight terrorism,” says Mutawakil. “But my fear is that we’re establishing the foundation for terrorism in the country, just as they did in Iraq.” He is particularly concerned about what he calls Saleh’s “divide and conquer” style.

Amid all this, Yemen has somehow managed to remain one of the most democratic nations in the (admittedly autocratic) Middle East–and one of the very few with a relatively free press. The government tolerates a raft of opposition parties and independent newspapers. Yemenis, for the most part, feel free to criticize the government, and even Saleh, in public.

The democratic reforms all stop short of threatening Saleh’s rule

The final straw came when her staff recorded “appalling cheating” by government officials during a by-election for a parliament seat. “This past year, the scales dropped from our eyes,” she says. “We’re tired of promises. We’re tired of good intentions. < > It comes to a point when it’s not enough to say that you held the country together as it fell down the tubes.”

“In the past, we have been lenient when it comes to accountability,” says Qirbi, the foreign minister. “Now we are making the people who are responsible accountable for any poor performance. We have overcome a major obstacle, which is admitting that there are deficits.”

“We have maybe the worst educational quality in the world,” says Arhabi, the minister of planning. “I have myself seen students in sixth grade, who if you ask them to pronounce the alphabet, they aren’t able to finish it. Forget about reading and writing.”

Even worse, some corruption is officially sanctioned. As many as 60,000 people are receiving at least two government salaries, often doled out officially to buy their loyalty. “Many of the double dippers are tribal sheiks or military people,” says Yahya al-Mutawakel, the vice minister of planning.

Perhaps the brightest is the Social Fund for Development, an independent government agency that helps build schools, clinics, roads, and water wells funded mostly by foreign nations. With only 150 full-time employees, the fund managed some 1,000 projects last year with an $80 million budget. The fund–and Arhabi, its director–win nearly universal praise from foreign donors for their integrity and exhaustive accounting system. The secret: highly paid employees and the ability to fire staff at will.

Underlying any discussion of reform, however, is one uncomfortable factor–nobody can picture Yemen without Saleh in charge. Even his most implacable critics fret that there is no viable alternative today

“I expect more dangerous risks in Yemen–extremism and fanaticism,” he says. “But it’s not related to religion. It comes out of the failure to satisfy life’s needs.”

For many, the upcoming local and presidential elections will be a test. And the stakes are high. “What we are afraid of is that the Yemeni people will lose hope in elections as a means of change,” Sabri says, “because this is what the traditional forces want.”

Itrs really a good article.

Salt

Filed under: Yemen, Yemen-Economy — by Jane Novak at 8:37 am on Friday, March 3, 2006

YT:

Despite all the gains and efforts of the Salt Establishment as one of the best public sector institutions, it faces a number of difficulties for which the state cannot find solutions. The corrupt Aden land mafia has seized some establishment land to build a petrol station within the salt basin area, disregarding the negative environmental impact such a station will cause by poisoning citizens, as salt is a substance for human consumption. In return, the Salt Establishment has filed a lawsuit against building the petrol station there, but the case has not yet been decided.

The Salt Establishment recently received a directive to transfer it and all its assets to the Yemeni Economic Establishment’s Aden branch, which will manage it. One wonders why such action was taken, whether the Salt Establishment failed to run at the required level or whether it simply faces what is occurring at Aden container port, which until now is in a state of confusion.

Land confescation, corrupt judiciary and economic concentration all in one story.

A Little Strapped for Cash?

Filed under: Yemen, Yemen-Economy — by Jane Novak at 7:53 am on Wednesday, February 1, 2006

SANAA, Yemen, Jan. 31 (UPI) — In a rare repudiation of a shady arms deal, (bwahahaha) Yemen is returning MiG-29 Fulcrum fighters to Moldova in return for its payment.

Yemen acquired the aircraft in 1994. Novosti reported that the 26 September Yemeni weekly political review quoted a senior government official as saying, “Our country is ready to return MiG-29 planes, which the Yemeni Socialist Party, in exchange for the sum paid for the purchase and the recognition of the illegality of the deal.”

The Yemeni Socialist Party was the ruling party in the People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen until the country’s unification in 1990. Four years later the Yemeni Socialist Party rebelled, trying to separate southern Yemen from the Republic of Yemen and restore its independence. The civil war resulted in 5,000 dead. After the uprising failed Yemeni Socialist Party leaders fled abroad and were sentenced to death in absentia until President Ali Abdullah Saleh pardoned them in May 2003.

Then we have this:

Sanaa, 31 Jan. (AKI) – The Saudi Fund for Development has approved the granting of loans worth some 392 million dollars to Yemen to carry out development projects in the country, the official news agency Saba news reports. The approval came in a delivered to the Minister of Planning and International Cooperation Ahmed Sofan, from Saudi Minister of Finance Ibrahim Abdul-Aziz al-Asa’af.

The fund agreed to grant Yemen five loans to finance projects at Central Hodeidah Hospital, the Medical College and other road projects. Sofan expressed his thanks on behalf of Yemen for the role the Saudi Fund is playing in supporting development in the country.

So now is this the normal millions of dollars paid to the Yemeni Sheiks annually or is this an additional thing?

The Looming Water Disaster

Filed under: Yemen, Yemen-Economy — by Jane Novak at 7:40 am on Wednesday, January 25, 2006

Reuters
The regime provides free water, the vast of majority of which is consumed by large qat plantations owned by influential people. The water supply is rapidly depleating. About 80% of the people dont have access to clean drinking water.

Many experts have urged the imposition of a fee for water usage, which would cut into the profits of powerful plantation owners. Often, however, landowners are politically connected. The rule of President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who has been in power since 1978, has been marked by a careful balancing act between these conflicts of interest.

Observers in the field, meanwhile, argue that the government is moving far too slowly to solve the problem. Negenman explained that many of the plans to improve water efficiency that were introduced ten years ago had since run out of steam. “The sense of urgency that we saw from the government in the 1990s seems to be lost,” he said.

Update: The Yemen Observer has this story verbaitum on their website as “by Observer staff” with no mention of Reuters. That’s kind of tacky, especially for a newspaper. But they do it all the time.

Corruption

Filed under: Yemen, Yemen-Corruption, Yemen-Economy — by Jane Novak at 8:59 pm on Tuesday, August 23, 2005

Yemen infested with corruption, says UNDP
By Observer Staff
Aug 23, 2005 – Vol. VIII Issue 33
SANA’A – A United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) report has said that Yemen is in the throes of major administrative lapses and the country is “infested with corruption” which has engulfed all basic employment, including its monitoring and control bodies, as well as the judicial service, Gulf News reports.

The report said trust in the Yemeni judiciary system had fallen to a low ebb due to the state of the judiciary and issues related to corruption. The situation was incompatible with the government’s future approach of ensuring equality before the law.

The 2005 report, which is based on good governance, launched by the Arab Regional Office of the UNDP, pointed out that the Yemeni judiciary was facing a number of problems and obstacles. Notable among them, the report said, was the unsuitability of existing laws and legislations. It said there is a lack of coordination between the government and law implementation, adding that the judiciary’s authority and entity were also ineffective. The report described the Yemeni judiciary as fragile and attributed the reason behind this fragility to various factors including lack of qualification and training for some of the judges, bad monitoring system on the courts and the general prosecution and lack of enough protection for judges.

It also said the government lacks effective system of exposing and checking corruption, adding that Yemen scored 19 on the Personal Accountability Index, whereas an average score by countries from the Middle East and North Africa stood at 32, while the average score of low-income countries stood at 38.

On the Quality Administration Index (IQA), Yemen scored 33.5 points compared to 46 points for countries in the Middle East and North Africa and 30 points for low-income countries. Under the Governance Quality Index (IGQ), Yemen scored 22.5 points against 37 points for countries in the Middle East and North Africa and 28 points for low-income countries.
The report said government units lack review and internal control methods and this “encourages corruption, lack of accountability and conflict of interest.”

It said Yemen is one of the world’s poorest countries with its per capita income in 2003 pegged at $564.89, adding that the country’s education and health system is very poor, while population growth continues to rise at a rate of 3.03 per cent between 2001 and 2003, up from 2.84 per cent in 2000.

http://www.yobserver.com/cgi-bin/yobserver/exec/view.cgi/1/7887

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