Armies of Liberation

Jane Novak's blog about Yemen

JMP’s al Sa’adi: There is no good will

Filed under: Civil Unrest, Elections, Islah, JMP, political violence — by Jane Novak at 7:32 am on Tuesday, September 8, 2009

This is a very interesting interview at the Yemen Post with Mohammed Al-Sa’adi
Assistant Secretary General of Islah Party, and not just because of al Saadi’s charcterization of the official media. At the same time the JMP produced a 90 page document on a national rescue plan:

Abdul Baset Al-Qaedi: The crisis is inflicting the country from its north to south together with an economic crisis, while the opposing Joint Meeting Parties (JMP) passively acts. Are you waiting for the regime’s collapse to be the alternative?

Mohammed Al-Sa’adi: I think you need to reconsider your vision. What is lost in people’s judgment is the objectivity. As a responsible person in JMP, let me tell you that we do bear the national concern. This is evidenced by the national vision proposed by JMP in which the situation of Yemen at different levels is diagnosed and solutions are put forward.

AQ: Some say that JMP is pushing towards complicating the situation in order to be the alternative?
MS: The ruling party is weak. Solutions provided in the past are no more effective. We have selected the best ways through which the peaceful transfer of power can be made including elections. We are trying to follow electoral channels and mechanisms which lead to a peaceful transfer of power. (Read on …)

New TV Station Closed: Kuwait Caves to Pressure from Sana’a

Filed under: Civil Rights, Islah, JMP, Kuwait, Media, Political Opposition, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 11:43 am on Thursday, August 27, 2009

Update 8/30/09: Kuwaiti diplomat denies the station even asked for a license and thus Kuwait never pulled it despite Yemeni government statements to the contrary.

Original post: Yemen is trying to shut down speech that they find too illuminating everywhere- including here in the US. Did Zindani ever get his programing up and running? That initiative was welcomed by Saleh but Hamid Al Ahmar’s satellite channel was fought vigorously through diplomatic channels. There was some prior tension between Yemen and Kuwait when Sana’a set up mourning tents for Saddam.

Kuwait government’s decision of closing down Suhail TV Channel, welcomed
Tuesday, 25-August-2009
al Motamar
Almotamar.net – A Yemeni official information source on Tuesday welcomed a decision taken by the Kuwaiti government on closing down transmission of Kuwait-based Suhail Satellite TV Channel owned by Hamid al-Ahmar.

The source said that positive decision has been received with big welcome by by the yemerni people’s circles owing to what that channel was broadcasting of programmes promoting to oisons of sedition , division and delusion of the public opinion and offending the reputation of the Yemeni people.

The source has , meanwhile , praised the brotherly relations between yemen and Kuwait and that of their two political leaderships in addition to the steady development of those relations in interest of the two Yemeni and Kuwaiti peoples.

Yemen also regrets the Iranian media “provocative campaign.”

299 Yemeni MPs Fail to Provide Financial Disclosure Forms as Required by Law

Filed under: Crime, GPC, Islah, Parliament, Reform, YSP, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 6:56 pm on Wednesday, August 19, 2009

The financial disclosure law was passed in 2007, and its a great concept, but it lacks enforcement mechanisms. Two of 301 MP’s submitted the required form to date. This is not a Parliament that’s going to take the tough position of standing against “the powers that be” for reform, transparency or equal rights. There’s a lot of mafia types. Parliament is an institutionalizaton of tribal authority structures. The Parliament is a tool of Saleh with little autonomy, but a lot of latitude. Crimes are rarely punished and flourish. The Parliament is somewhat more outspoken lately but is not even remotely a counter-balance to the executive. Yemen’s decision makers are a shadow government (Saleh and his family and cronies), and the public has no mechanism of acountability.

Update: Yemen Times “There are around 36,000 officials who are included in the public sector and are obliged by the financial disclosure law to admit their financial disclosures every two years,” she (Vice-Chairman of the Supreme National Authority for Combating Corruption Dr. Bilkis Abu Osba’) continued. “Since we created the financial disclosure sector, around 10,000 financial disclosures have been received.”

al Tagheer: Mohammed Al-Matari, head of the financial disclosure the Anti-corruption “Parliament” still ranks high on the list of backward and Late to provide financial disclosure statements. . . لافتا في تصريح لـ”الوحدوي ” إلى أن من بين 301 عضو هم عدد أعضاء البرلمان , تقدم فقط عضوان اثنان بإقرارات الذمة المالية . He noted in a statement to “unitary” to that of the 301 members are members of Parliament, the only two members of financial disclosure.

مبديا أسفه واستغرابه من عدم وجود تفاعل وتعاون من قبل البرلمان في هذا الشأن لما يمثله من سلطة دستورية وقانونية عليا في البلد . He expressed his regret and surprise at the lack of interaction and cooperation by the Parliament in this regard because it represents the authority of the constitutional and legal positions in the country. في حين لم تتلق الهيئة سوى 12 إقرارا بالذمة المالية من مجلس الشورى لعدد But it has not received the recognition of only 12 financial disclosure of the Shura Council of the number

أثنا عشر عضوا من أصل 111 عضوا هم عدد أعضاء مجلس الشورى .. Twelve members of the 111 members who are the number of members of the Shura Council ..

Hamid on al Jazeera: The Saleh Era Must End

Filed under: Biographies, Islah, Parliament — by Jane Novak at 9:29 am on Thursday, August 6, 2009

because he’s destroying Yemen… Hamid has a reasonable plan, the VP steps in until early elections, but the issue of the electoral reform is still unresolved. But Hamid is right that the continuation of Saleh’s dictatorship is a failed strategy and progress requires some change, if not an administrative purge.

Hameed Al-Ahmar (the Son of Abdullah Al-Ahmar), who is a member of the Yemen Parliament as well as of the Islah party, gave an interview on 05/08/09 with Al-Jazeera.
He openly and honestly spoke of the condition and events in Yemen, and pointed the blame directly to the Yemeni president Ali Saleh for the country’s failure.
He also gave a direct message to the president to step down from the Presidency and and hand it over to his vice president Al-Ariani, while carrying out immediate elections for a new president.
He also accused the Yemeni President of defying the constitution by giving all the governmental and military posts to his sons and relatives, and not giving the Southerners a chance, thus accusing the president of being a traitor.Hameed condemned what is happening in the South of Yemen and what is being done to the Southerners from oppression and ill-treatment.
Hameed spoke very boldly about the situation, and when asked by the t.v presenter whether or not he was going to return to Yemen, he replied with a bold “Yes”! Explaining that his tribe is going to protect him, and will not let anything happen to him.

Reported: Rasha Rashed

His tribe is also Saleh’s tribe.

Update: Abdelmalik al Houthi is taking it as a Saleh-enduced call to dialog and responding with a bit of bluster.

Update: Al Sahwa has a write up:

Sahwa Net – Yemen’s opposition senior leader and Member of Parliament Hamid al-Ahmer has urged Yemen president Ali Abdullah Saleh to step down, hand over power to his vice-president Abdu Rabo Mansour Hadi and set an appointment to elect a new president.

(Read on …)

Faris Manna and Hamid al Ahmar in Saudi?

Filed under: Islah, Saada War, Saudi Arabia, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 11:49 pm on Sunday, July 26, 2009

According to the Houthis they are..

According to informed sources to the news that Sheikh Sa’dah / Manna Knight Chairman of the Committee for mediation between the authority and Houthis are extensive discussions in Saudi Arabia, accompanied by Sheikh / Red Hussein. (Read on …)

Yemeni Opposition Party Harassed

Filed under: Islah, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 10:58 pm on Sunday, July 26, 2009

President Saleh calls for dialog as he prevents the opposition party form holding its conference. Am I the only one who sees the irony here? al Sahwa

Sahwa Net- The Assistant Secretary-General of the Islah party Mohammad al-Saadi has expressed sorrow over the involvement of President Ali Abdullah Saleh in preventing the Islah party in Adhala’a province from holding its congress. (Read on …)

10 Killed In Clashes Over Control Of Yemen Mosque

Filed under: Islah, Religious, Saada War, YSP, land disputes — by Jane Novak at 3:32 pm on Monday, July 20, 2009

The Sa’ada War didn’t start as a sectarian conflict but a political one. The concern here is the clashes were in Al Jawf. There’s infiltration into Hajjah and Amran also, the Yemen Post points out in a detailed article.

SANA’A, Yemen (AFP) –Ten people have been killed in clashes over control of a north Yemen mosque between Shiite Zaidi rebels and militants from the country’s main Sunni opposition party, both groups said Monday. (Read on …)

Zindani Mobilizes al Hikma Grads Against Southerners

Filed under: Civil Rights, Islah, Religious, South Yemen, personalities — by Jane Novak at 12:10 pm on Friday, July 17, 2009

Deviants he calls them…

Al Motamar

Al-Zandani calls for clear stabs towards calls for apostasy
Wednesday, 08-July-2009
Almotamar.net – Sheikh Abdulmajid al-Zandani called Wednesday on those reciting the Holy Koran to translate it on the ground. In a ceremony honouring 550 persons finishing a course in Koran recitation held by Al-Hikma al Yamania Society in Yemen this morning, al-Zandani said the entire nation is in need of competing the structure through learning Islamic sciences. He clarified the reality of the Yemeni nation is divided into two realities; an honourable reality and a deviant reality. The deviant reality calls for colonization of Yemen and calls on world countries to “invade us and impose guardianship on us.” He asked was not what happened to Iraq because of some deluded ones who called long time in Iraq, questioning what the result was after occupation. One million martyrs and two million wounded. (Read on …)

Three Opposition Election Observers Sentenced to Death

Filed under: Education, Islah, Targeted Individuals, Targeting, Trials, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 1:45 pm on Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Yemen’s judiciary is a tool of political vengence.

This is the same brutal dictatorship that is now promising to solve all problems by empowering the GPC dominated local councils, but has not yet changed the electoral laws as promised in 2006.

Sahwa Net – The Supreme Council of the Joint Meeting Parties has called human rights and freedom organizations to stand against an unfair sentence of death against three of Islah’s representatives in poll centers during the presidential and local council elections held in 2006.

Khalid Nahshal, Mabkhoot Nahshal and Abdu Nahshal were sentenced to death last week on charges of killing an officer and a soldier in crossfire during the presidential and local council elections led held in 2006.

In a statement, JMP said that the sentence was a settlement of political accounts and political pressures were practiced on justice and there were several violations to judiciary.

“The sentence was issued inside the jail, not in a court and that apparent evidence of legal violations” said the statement.

Opposition Party Leader Suspended in Yemen

Filed under: Islah, Reform, political violence — by Jane Novak at 1:47 pm on Thursday, June 18, 2009

What do we think “suspension” means in this case? Arrested, detained?

Sahwa Net – The Dialogue-preparation Committee recently formed by Yemen’s opposition parties has expressed its deep concern at the suspension of Abdul-Wahab al-Anisi, the Secretary-General of the Islah party, while he was heading to attend a meeting of the Dialogue-Preparation Committee which aims at diagnosing Yemen’s current stalemates and solving them.

Security elements of the Central Security Organization had suspended on Tuesday Abdul-Wahab al-Anisi, the Secretary-General of Yemen’s main opposition party, the Islah.

An official source of the general secretariat of the Islah party strongly denounced the accident, demanding to investigate the security elements and identify the authorities involved in the incident.

The source also considered the event of seizure a form of wrong polices followed up in the governance, stressing that the Islah retains its rights to hold the involved accountable.

Hamid and Ali Nassir Chat

Filed under: Islah, JMP, Political Opposition, South Yemen — by Jane Novak at 11:40 am on Thursday, June 11, 2009

Interesting. The Yemen Post has some good quotes. And its entirely true that the best outcome is a unified, just system, but in order to do that, the current authorities have to be replaced. There’s a huge confidence gap in terms of some southerners view Hamid and the JMP though. How he would demonstrate his sincerity and committment to equal rights is a difficult question.

Earlier this week, Sheikh Hamid bin Abdullah al-Ahmar met President Ali Nasser Mohammed in Damascus confirming that the visit was his own initiative in an effort to discuss with President Ali Nasser Mohammed the ways for contributing to take Yemen out of the current crises, and preserving Yemen’s entity, achievements and unity. Al-Ahmar expressed his satisfaction with Ali Nasser’s fixed and well-known attitude towards Yemen’s unity that showes great readiness to continue and intensify his efforts in order to maintain Yemen’s stability, unity and integrity.

The Secretary of the Preparatory Committee for the National Dialogue confirmed in a statement having many views in common with Ali Nasser, including being very keen on Yemen unity, believing that the authority in Yemen is responsible for the current critical situation, and that a real change is needed for Yemen to be brought out of the crisis and for safe and prosperous future. He added that it is time for those who harmed Yemen to pay for it , and that Yemen is no longer able to bear the power’s mistakes that led to this complex and dangerous situation, explaining that repression and confiscation rights is not the way to counter any separatist calls, and that justice, bringing rights back to their owners, and addressing the real reasons that made people, who earlier took up arms to defend unit, today call for secession adding that misusing power and using it to penetrate the Constitution and breaking the law every day is the key reason of any behavior against the Constitution or the law by individuals or groups.

On the same regard, Al-Ahmar said that what authorities recently did, charging people of acting against national unity, taking advantage of having a complete control on the media, in addition to being able to breach the Constitution and the law to confiscate the freedom of opinion and insulting national figures, pointing out to Mohammed Salem Basendwah, all this shows nothing but being bankrupt which has become clear to all and everyone.

Al-Ahmar was also quoted as saying that the storm that the authority made through media outlets might be an attempt to justify a separatist step by the authority itself to ensure keeping power, even if it sacrificed Yemen’s entity, security and integrity explaining that recent words and actions by the authority proved that its only aim is keeping power and not the country, which justifies its inability to believe that still there are people whose only aim is just the people and the country.

Interesting concept but I think they just never learn.

(Read on …)

The Virtue Conference: Mostly al-Iman Students

Filed under: Civil Rights, Islah, Presidency, Religious, Women's Issues, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 11:09 am on Sunday, July 20, 2008

Having played the terrorism card to exhaustion, Saleh plays the religion card with some trick to divide the Islah party, something to bolster his political capital at a time of weakness. Whatever it is, its a furtherance of the growing Talabanization of Yemen. This is an interesting post by a Yemeni woman entitled “Yemen, Sexual Harassment and Women”, who writes:

The problem in Yemen and Saudi in my opinion stems from the sexual objectification of women and a culture that views them as inferior, not only are they physically weaker but intellectually and morally inferior….The strict segregation is part of the cause as well, it creates lack of interaction and familiarity between the sexes. I consider it unhealthy that relatives for example cannot mingle with each other, instead females retreat hastily in another room if a man is approaching without even a greeting. Curtains are used to separate the sexes when talking to each other, those situations sexualise a perfectly normal environment. Any interaction between the sexes is deemed to be sexual.

The above author concludes , “It’s important that we strike a middle and balanced ground in order to have a healthy society and when pursuing virtue not achieve the opposite.”

An article from the Yemen Oserver notes the attendees of the conference were mostly al-Iman students, so the whole thing is looking like an al-Zindani creation, including the declaration that any women in the work force will lead to chaos in society and sex in the streets. Meanwhile the vice in Yemeni society is concentrated among its elite and leaders who steal food daily from the mouths of starving children. They are the ones who need moral guardians on an hourly basis. As the Italians say, a fish rots from its head. And of course and predictably, the conference focused on villifying journalists in particular.

The Yemen Observer: An alliance of Yemeni religious scholars and tribal leaders has decided to watch and safeguard the morals and values of the society through holding annual meetings rather than permanent committees, which were strongly criticized before being established.

Under the slogan “It’s the guards of virtue who will protect the ship from drowning,” the clerics and tribesmen – the self-appointed guardians of virtue – decided to hold a yearly conference, called “The meeting of promoting virtue and combating vice.” They backed down from a previous proposal submitted to President Ali Abdullah Saleh last May, for establishing virtue committees (religious police) and for monitoring the activities of individuals and institutions by banning any vice-related activity such as selling alcoholic drinks, night clubs, hotels, restaurants, or massage centers.

The clerics and tribesmen retracted from establishing their committees of promoting virtue and combating vice after strong criticisms from journalists, writers and politicians, who viewed the job of such committees as the responsibility of the state.

No single woman attended the one-day meeting held on Tuesday July 15 by the tribesmen and the Sunni religious scholars. The meeting was chaired by the tribal leader, Sadeq Abdullah al-Ahmar – sheikh of Yemen’s most influential tribe, the Hashed – and cleric Abdul Majeed al-Zandani, who is accused by the United States of supporting terrorism.

Most of the nearly two thousands male attendees were students of Al-Eyman University, a religious university run and owned by al-Zandani. The rest of the attendees were Salafi clerics and tribesmen. No prominent politicians from the Islamist party Islah attended the meeting except Sheikh al-Zandani, who has his own Salafi current inside the party. The politicians of Islah refused the demand of establishing committees for virtue, saying that it was only a political trick from the president Saleh to divide the Islah party, the largest opposition party on the one hand, and divide the opposition alliance which includes the Islah Islamists, Socialists and Nasserites on the other.

“Talking about committees for virtue has political reasons behind, aiming to mix the cards and confuse political life in an official attempt to divert the attention from its helplessness and corruption of the government, and thus holding others responsible for its faults including weakening the effectiveness of the official bodies and working outside the constitution and law,” said the alliance of the three parties in a statement issued three days before the meeting of the clerics and tribesmen. (Read on …)

Hussain al-Ahmar

Filed under: Biographies, Islah, Libya, Saudi Arabia, Tribes, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 8:23 pm on Saturday, April 26, 2008

Libya is a commercial relationship, but SA is a historic one.

Mareb Press

Southern crisis is political and rioters must be tried for high treason, says Al Ahmer
Wednesday 23 April 2008 / Mareb Press

The Head of the National Solidarity Council (NSC) and Member of Parliament, Hussain al-Ahmer, described his relations with Saudi Arabia as historical while he said, “his relation with Libya is commercial one and it is currently suspended but it will be resumed at any time”.

Al-Ahmer said in interview with Mareb Press the current southern crisis is political crisis.
“Some parts in Yemen want to exercise political pressures by moving the street in order to achieve their goals. I wonder if there is any Yemeni person boasting of secession” he added.

Al-Ahmer accused the committees which were formed to resolve the issues of the southerners of procrastination.

He added there is no problem in arresting and trying those people who carried out sabotage and riot acts. He demanded to try them on the charge of high treason.

About the aim of opening new branch for the NSC in Aden city, al-Ahmer said “The aim is to stand with people irrespective of their partisan affiliation and to spread awareness among them and to solve their problems.”

Zindani’s Herbal Aids Cure

Filed under: Islah, Medical, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 9:13 pm on Saturday, April 12, 2008

Mareb Press

Head of al-Eman Religious University, Sheikh Abdul Magid al-Zandani, revealed that about 25 cases of HIV/AIDS were cured, 9 cases of them were completely cured while in the other cases, the AIDS virus was decreased.

He confirmed that he has used the drug on the HIV-infected unborn children and they were free from the virus when they born.

He said the laboratories of American Marinz confirmed the effectiveness of the drug.

AlZanday said in a lecture at the margin of the first Medical Conference which coincides with the sixth medical exhibition for drugs and medical equipments in the Capital Sana’a said, “Some AIDS patients have used the three-kind drug and the result was positive. We are still working in our researches and very soon you will hear good results.”

He clarified that the drug was experimented in the University of the King Abdul Aziz in Saudi Arabia.

He added the drug has also been experimented on animals in the Hospital of Science and Technology and the result showed that “the drug causes no poisonous or side effects.”

Sheikh AlZandani said that AlEman University intended to build a hospital for modern, Chinese, Arab and Prophet Medicine.

Also, he showed that his university is ready to cure free all AIDS patients in the Prophet medical research center in the university.

Yemen Times:

SANA’A, April 13 — The World Health Organization (WHO) denied that it received any official letter regarding Abdul Majeed Al-Zandani’s claim that he discovered a cure for HIV and AIDS, either from the Yemeni government or from the Ministry of Health and Population.

“The organization follows particular and scientific specifications in determining the efficiency of authorized medicines,” said Rasheed Rajab, WHO administrative officer, claiming that there is no prove of the existence of any medication that can terminate the HIV virus.

Abdul Majeed al-Zandani, chairman of Al-Iman University, announced on Friday at a press conference during the first international medical conference in Yemen that nine out of ten sampled people have been proved to be free of the virus after they received his medicine. He noted that the samples were taken by the Ministry of Health and Population and given to the WHO, which then transferred the samples to the American Laboratory of the Marines in Cairo to prove whether they are HIV-free or not.

In December 2006, Al-Zindani stated to the media that he carried out tests on an herbal formula that cured HIV patients, but he refused to expose the formula, claiming that international companies would steal it.

“I’ve been doing my own research to find a cure for this disease for twenty years now with a group of scientists and scholars known as the “Miracle Team,” a team that is made up of people from different Arab countries like Egypt, Saudia Arabia and Yemen, and the main objective of this team is to work continuously to find cures for different diseases,” said Al-Zindani.

He explained that he first began with a woman infected with AIDS and tried to find a cure for her. He gave her a prescription for a particular medicine, by which he claims she was completely cured within 45 days. After that, he applied his medicine to 13 other infected people and said that 10 of them were completely cured. Al-Zindani added that the second experiment could be verified by German and Jordanian laboratories. He accused the Ministry of Health and Population of hindering his discovery instead of adopting it and supporting him. “I’m really surprised by the ministry and their negative response. Though the tests have been proved by them, the ministry didn’t react or even ask to adopt this medical discovery. In addition, I’ve been told to watch out for myself and not talk bout it,” said Al-Zindani.

Earlier news from 2006 can be found here.

New al-Ahmar Alliance with Saleh

Filed under: Islah, LNG, Ministries, Tribes, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 10:02 am on Monday, April 7, 2008

A gas tender, a Parlimentary speakership and a Minstry, the boyz sold their postions cheap. Yes, dissappointing.

Yemen Times

These challenges facing the tribally-backed regime have pushed Saleh not to forward concrete actions, but revamp cracks in his tribal coalitions with Al-Ahmar family. Suddenly, the president was able to normalize his relationship with the sons of Al-Ahmar, extending a gas tender to Hamid, appointing another as vice speaker of Parliament and another as deputy minister of sports and youth. Hussein, who set up the tribal National Solidarity Council to irritate the regime, has been seen on TV with the president in some events.

This attests to Saleh’s allegations that these vocal and critical “boys” want their share of the cake and nothing more. Yes, this is the question. This restructuring of the tribal coalition is meant to challenge disturbances in Sa’ada and in the southern provinces. It is a coalition against the public’s demands. People were naively fooled when they believed that the sons of Sheikh al-Ahmar would side by the public and their pains.

Saleh has tried to develop a loose coalition with the tribe and Al-Ahmar family in particular but found it difficult, and therefore preferred to compromise with the new young leaders of Hashid. Such a technique might serve to extend the hold up of his regime, which is going through hard times, but will not rein in the outrageous people who felt disappointed in the man who promised to improve their living standards in the 2006 elections and now tells them to drink “sea water,” a gesture of recklessness.

At the same time, the protesters demanding separation are serving the regime’s interests, for the people are not in favor of separation. The solution to our problems which are embroiling the country into turmoil is not splitting again into south and north. The country cannot simply split into north and south. It would rather mean complete disintegration and fragmentation of the whole country, which means a bleak future for everybody, without exception.

Now, as the country is on the edge of a precipice, concrete solutions are urgently needed before it is too late and everything falls apart.

Islah Bargaining

Filed under: Islah, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 9:22 am on Thursday, March 27, 2008

al-Motamar

Islah bargains on a big government complex in return for elections
Thursday, 27-March-2008
Almotamar.net – Local media sources disclosed Thursday a political extortion practiced by the Muslim Brotherhood in Yemen, the Yemeni Congregation for Reform (Islah) party over control of one of the largest government buildings to be taken as headquarters of the party in the capital Sana’a with the aim of expanding its trade activities and investment projects without taking into consideration the rest of the Joint Meeting Parties.

While the sources indicated to ongoing negotiations and dialogue between the Joint Meeting Parties and the president of the republic on formation of the elections committee, the sources disclosed about an agenda of the Islah as part of its negotiations. According to a report by Elaf private sector newspaper in its latest issue quoting political sources as saying that the Islah demanded to be given its own headquarters suitable for its status in the political arena, proposing the Defence complex located in Bab al-Yamen or the building of the General Command located in Al-Qiyada Street.

The Islah individual request came in coincidence of the negotiations and dialogue going on about formation of the elections committee a few days from finishing a study of amendments concerning the elections law by the specialised parliamentary committee.

Chairman of the special committee entrusted with studying the amendments presented by the government on the election law Sheikh Mohammed Bin Naji al-Shaef told Elaf newspaper that members of the committee from the opposition parties have for the third time proposed postponement. He indicated that delegates of parties parliamentary blocs were told to inform their parties that the concerned committee, in addition to a chairman and a reporter would on Saturday as the last date given to those parties by the committee, would take measures they are authorized with constitutionally and legally for referring its report to the parliament on the amendments related to formation of the higher committee for elections from judges.

Al-Shaef added that they at the committee worked to observe the political character of amendments and give a chance for the parties accord particularly that there are dialogues, similar to negotiations between the parties and the president of the republic to reach an accord result between the two sides concerning the supreme commission for elections.

Elaf newspaper said the opposition parties leadership prefers negotiation and dialogue with the president of the republic personally.

Attacks Against Female Schools

Filed under: Elections, Islah, Religious, Women's Issues, Yemen, political violence — by Jane Novak at 12:43 pm on Saturday, March 22, 2008

Yemen Observer

Principals of all girls’ schools in Sana’a staged a sit-in at the 7th of July school on Wednesday, condemning the attack and at the same time condemning the silence of official authorities and the teachers syndicate about the previous attack that targeted 7th of July school principal Shafia’a al-Seragi. Supporters of al-Seragi said that this silence encouraged the terrorists to launch the second brutal attack.

“Any man that beats a woman, whether she is a teacher, a principal or even an ordinary woman is a coward, as are the officials that close their eyes to violence committed against women,” said the principal of al-Nizari girls’ school.

Three principals of girls’ schools, including al-Seragi, have been attacked in the past two weeks. The three attacked principals are believed to be political and social activists that promote girls’ education and the adoption of new educational methods that prohibit violence in schools.

In addition to the beating of Shafia’a al-Seragi by three men, a principal of a school in Hodeidah was beaten by five women from the Islah Islamic party and also received threats of having her house blown up. A third principal’s car was stolen and had its seats and tires stripped. Her house electricity was cut off by unidentified persons at the same time that the other two female principals were attacked.

Women Worth Half of a Man in Yemen

Filed under: Islah, Parliament, Reform, Women's Issues, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 9:04 am on Thursday, March 20, 2008

Yemen Times

Reviewing the legislative system of Yemen for the first time, one gets the impression that the laws are well-drafted and ensure the rights of both men and women. Upon analyzing and dissecting those laws and regulations, one will inevitably realize that certain elements of this system, which regulates private and public relationships, involve a considerable degree of discrimination against women. This conclusion is supported by the legal teams formed by the National Women’s Committee (NWC), which have been working since 2000 to examine Yemeni laws for gender bias.

The NWC wanted to ensure this system complies with the Islamic tenets and principles as the main source of legislation, with the Constitution and with the international conventions ratified by the Republic of Yemen, particularly the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW). The legal review teams came up with proof that there is flagrant discrimination embedded in some provisions, most severely in the Personal Status law, the Nationality law and the Penalty law.

The Personal Status law does not specify an appropriate age of marriage, which as a result, inadvertently permits early marriage among young females – an especially common problem in rural areas. Early marriage in turn affects girls’ ability to continue their education. With early marriage comes early pregnancies, which can cause problems like fistula (a condition that causes incontinence) or even to death during childbirth. (Read on …)

Islah’s Shura Council

Filed under: Islah, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 9:20 am on Friday, March 7, 2008

Al-Sahwa

Islah Shoura Council calls for escalating peaceful struggle

Alsahwa.net

March 25, 2008- The Shoura Council of the Yemeni Congregation for Reform(Islah), the Yemen’s main opposition party, has called Islah and the Joint Meeting Parties’ members to escalate peaceful struggle and stand by the oppressed people, stressing the importance of combating corruption and arbitrariness of the Yemeni authorities.

The Shoura Council also affirmed in its regular round concluded on March 17 that terrible political and economic situations and living standards endanger all classes of Yemeni people and that such situations were an inevitable outcome resulted in by wrong policies of the ruling party.

It also discussed the dangerous updates in the Southern and eastern governorates, expressing deep concern over the catastrophic consequences coming up as a result of the authorities’ wrong policies which jeopardize national unity.

It also confirmed its solidarity with citizens in the southern governorates and their fair demands through peaceful struggle and refused any repressing practices, asking the authorities, in the meantime, to give the military and civil retirees their financial rights fully.

It warned the ruling party of amending the state-constitution individually and apart from its political partners, voicing concern over the economic decline which led to hard poverty, unemployment, lack of equal opportunities.

The Islah’s Shoura Council also warned of any potential risings of oil derivatives, demanding to expose the smugglers of oil.

Regarding Saada conflict, it called for faithful and devoted efforts and tackle the damages of the fighting, slamming the secrecy and silence about the Qatari- mediated deal signed with al-Houthi rebels.

It further stressed the citizens’ rights to demonstrate and protest through peaceful struggle and possession of private media, renouncing the authority’s interference in syndicates and NGOs.

It also denounced all forms of repression, kidnappings, pursuits, raids, and arrests, imprisonments practiced against activists, journalists and citizens.

Zindani, GPC Head and Saddiq al-Ahmar call for resistance

Filed under: GPC, Islah, Media, Palestinians, Tribes, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 12:37 pm on Monday, March 3, 2008

News Yemen

Head of Al-Eman religious university, member of Yemeni Clerics Association, sheikh Abdul-Majid al-Zindani has called for changing the Organization of Islamic Conference into an Arab-Islamic federation and to set up a Yemen-based satellite channel for the federation. (Read on …)

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