Armies of Liberation

Jane Novak's blog about Yemen

864 Southern Political Prisoners, and 3000 arrested for the Saada War

Filed under: Civil Rights, Saada War, South, Targeting, Yemen, prisons — by Jane Novak at 1:06 pm on Thursday, July 24, 2008

There are thousands of political prisoners, preventative detentions or arbitrary arrests relating to the Sa’ada war. Witness Testimony, Click Here Today IRIN reported, “Abdul-Rashid al-Faqih, head of Hiwar Forum, a local non-governmental organisation (NGO), said about 3,000 people had been arrested by the authorities for supporting al-Houthi. Of these, 500 detainees are known. The rest are unidentified because their families are scared of reporting their fate. Their whereabouts are unknown, he told IRIN.”

About 3000 sounds right and then there are the southern political prisoners, Al-Sahwa:

Sahwa Net-Several activists have stressed the importance of opposing the arbitrary arrests, affirming the illegality of what is named the State Security Court in which southern leaders and activists are trying.

Mohammad al-Mikhlafi , head of the Yemeni Observatory for Human Rights, said that the political prisoners number amounted 864 from March up to-date, pointing out that all of them are from the southern provinces except the comedian Fahad al-Qarni.

He added in a seminar organized by YOHR on Wednesday in Sana’a that such trials ignite hatred against the unification particularly when many political figures are among those who are being prosecuted. Al-Mikhlafi said that the judiciary became an opponent of journalists, indicating that journalists are prevented from attending public hearings and prosecuted.

Five Wounded in Lahj Protest

Filed under: South, Yemen, political violence — by Jane Novak at 7:23 pm on Tuesday, July 22, 2008

later reports put the figure at eight wounded

SANAA (AFP) — Five people, including a young boy, were wounded in southern Yemen on Tuesday when police fired on demonstrators demanding the release of more than 80 people arrested during previous protests, witnesses said.

Dozens of demonstrators were also detained during the new protest, in Radfan in southern Lahij province, the witnesses told AFP.

Police fired live bullets and tear gas to disperse the march, they said.

Besides demanding the release of scores of people held since demonstrations in southern provinces earlier this year, the protestors also called for an end to the trials of three senior members of the opposition Yemen Socialist Party (YSP) and 36 other people who were charged in connection with the turmoil.

Hassan Baoum, a member of the YSP’s political bureau, YSP central committee member Yehya Ghaleb al-Shuaibi and activist Ali Haitham al-Ghareeb were charged with inciting protests which led to clashes with police in March and April.

Defence lawyers call their trial, which began in May, politically-motivated.

Authorities have blamed the wave of protests on the YSP, the former ruling party in southern Yemen.

Media Ban on Baum’s Trial

Filed under: Media, South, Trials, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 10:34 am on Monday, July 21, 2008

M&C: Sana’a, Yemen - A state security court in Sana’a imposed a media gag order Monday in the trial of three opposition leaders charged with stirring up violent protests in southern Yemen earlier this year.

Presiding judge Muhssien Alwan issued the order at the start of the second hearing into the case, saying that the gag order applied to both local and foreign media.

Police officers guarding the court’s gate prevented journalists from entering even before the judge issued the ban. When the highly publicized trial began on May 28, journalists were allowed into the courtroom.

Hassan Baoum, Yahya al-Shouaibi and Ali al-Gharib, all senior members of the opposition Yemeni Socialist Party, are charged with instigating civil disorder.

Protests and riots hit several southern Yemeni cities where disgruntled youths took to the streets in April to protest what they called discriminatory army recruiting policies against southerners.

The Yemeni authorities charge the three men incited violent protests and riots that hit several southern cities.

At least 13 people were killed and more than 70 were injured in clashes with security forces.

I have 26 killed, hundreds injured and several hundred imprisoned.

Update 1: Defense withdraws, and Baoum admits to calling for secesssion.

Sahwa Net –The defense of three political prisoners withdrew from the court on Monday as it decided imposing media ban in the trial. Journalists were prevented from attending the trial even before the judge issued the ban.

The three senior leaders of the Yemeni Social Party, Hassan Ba Oam, Yahya al-Shouaibi and Ali al-Gharib are charged with inciting violent protests and riots that hit several southern cities in this year . In the hearing, Hassan Ba Oam admitted that he had called to secession, and refusing Yemen’s regime and the trial.

Update 2: Two of three defense withdrew, one is a journalist.

The Ruling Party website (I guess the ban doesn’t apply to them.) The Court also decided banning publication that would affect the process of justice and permitting publication of only proceedings of the trial. The body defending the defendants withdrew from the court except the defence lawyer of defendant Hassan Baoum.

Defendant Ali Haitham al-Gharib claimed that this charge is a publication charge and that he is a journalist, demanding that his file be sent to the Press Prosecution but the chairman of prosecution replied to the defendant statement that the crime is against the security of the state.

(Read on …)

Public Employees Forced to Attend Celebrations

Filed under: Employment, Presidency, South, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 8:13 pm on Thursday, July 17, 2008

Saleh is celebrating 30 years in power.

Sahwa Net –Demonstrations held on Thursday in Dhala and Lahj provinces demanded to cancel celebrations in which the authorities force citizens to attend to, according to their descriptions .

The demonstrators described marking the July 17th as a two parts behavior and exclusion policy. Sahwa Net correspondent in Dhala province said that slogans demanding to recognize the south issue end of prosecuting southern activists and release political prisoners were raised in the demonstrations. “Demonstrators stressed the continuation of peaceful struggle until all citizens’ rights are met” added he. Furthermore, demonstrations held Thursday in Lahj province denounced marking the July 17 as a national occasion, considering such act a devotion of division language.

On the other hand, the Joint Meeting Parties in Mahweet condemned forcing employees to attend the celebration of the president’s 30th anniversary of assuming power. Yemen’s president Saleh took power in north on 17 July 1978.

Yemeni Security Forces Blanket Aden on War Anniversary

Filed under: Civil Rights, Janes Articles, South, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 8:13 am on Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Yemeni security forces blanket Aden on war anniversary
By Jane Novak LWJ July 11, 2008 8:03 AM

In the early morning hours Monday, Yemeni army units supported by Central Security forces blanketed Aden City, the former capital of southern Yemen, in advance of a planned civil rights demonstration.

By the end of the day, the 14th anniversary of the end of Yemen’s civil war, government forces had arrested more than 300 in Aden and detained numerous reporters. Security blocked all the routes to the public square at al Hashimi station, the site of the planned sit-in.

The clashes marked a year of near continuous civil unrest in southern Yemen. The movement is spearheaded by former southern military officers, the Military Retirees Coordination Council (MRCC), who demand equal opportunity for southerners.

“The security forces directed by the Sana’a regime were not satisfied with closing up the exits and entrances to al Hashimi square, but in addition they launched a random arrest campaign targeting anyone near al Hashimi square and took them to military prisons,” a member of the MRCC leadership commented on Monday’s events to this reporter.

Demonstrations were held throughout southern Yemen on Monday. In Lahj, dozens were arrested. In Dhalie, 80 miles from Aden, a grenade wounded eight when police moved into to break up a demonstration. Protests in Dhalie have previously drawn tens of thousands with protesters’ arrests and deaths sparking more demonstrations.

Security forces arrested reporters from Al Jazeera TV, Marebpress.net, Alhadath.net, and Elaph newspaper and held them incommunicado for several hours until the crowds had broken up.

The demonstrations marked the 14th anniversary of the 1994 capture of Aden by President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s northern military forces, which ended a bloody two-month civil war.

Some activists charge the South has since been treated as the spoils of war, with jobs, scholarships, and leadership positions denied to Southerners, and land and natural resources plundered by the victors for over a decade. The unity of North and South Yemen, President Saleh’s crowning achievement, is described by some in the South as a military occupation that contravenes the UN resolutions governing the cessation of hostilities in the civil war.

Officials in Aden last week warned against unauthorized demonstrations and against persons from outside Aden coming to the city to disturb the peace. The central government defends its tactics as necessary to maintain stability. Dozens of protesters have been killed by security forces since 2007. Earlier in the year, the regime announced that deaths or damage that occur during a protest are the liability of the protest organizers.

In May, Hassan Baoum and other Socialist Party officials were charged in state security court with instigating civil disorder, a death penalty offense, for speaking at a demonstration where police later killed several protesters.

Prominent opposition leaders, newsmen, and activists are among the nearly 1,000 arrested since the protests began in 2007, and many remain in jail. “All of these acts which were committed by the Sana’a regime never frighten us,” the MRCC source said, commenting on the government’s tactics. “We will continue in our peaceful struggle until we get all our legal rights.”

At an afternoon press conference held on Monday, Dr. Mohammed Saleh al Qubati, spokesman for the opposition Joint Meeting Parties, demanded an official, impartial inquiry into the day’s events, saying Aden has become “a military checkpoint where citizens cannot go out for shopping.”

Three Police Injured in Ambush in Abyan

Filed under: Security Forces, South, TI: Internal, Yemen, political violence — by Jane Novak at 10:39 pm on Monday, July 7, 2008

Trend

Three policemen injured in southern Yemen ambush
08.07.08 17:26

Suspected Islamic militants on Tuesday ambushed a police patrol in southern Yemen, injuring three policemen, local sources said.

The police vehicle was attacked while driving on a highway leading to Ja’ar city in the southern province of Abyan, the sources told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa.

Believed to be members of a militant Islamic group, the attackers opened fire on the vehicle and fled into the mountains, the sources said.

Police forces set up checkpoints and sent troops to the area to chase the attackers, witnesses said.

Ja’ar is located nearly 600 kilometres south of the capital Sana’a, and is close to mountains where armed Islamic groups take shelter.

In March, five policemen were injured in a bomb attack against the local government compound in Ja’ar. Officials said Islamic insurgents were behind the attack.

Southern Protesters Bombed in Dhalie, 7 Injured

Filed under: Civil Rights, Security Forces, South — by Jane Novak at 10:11 am on Monday, July 7, 2008

Seven people injured in blast in al-Dhale province
Monday 07 July 2008 14ouMon, 07 Jul 2008 14:00:48 +0300 02 PM / Mareb Press

About Seven people were injured on Monday in an explosion in al-Dhalae province, south of Yemen, during a peaceful march carried out by political movements in al-Dhalae.

The Islah party website, al-Sahwa quoted the source as saying that at least seven people were injured in explosion resulted from a bomb thrown by an unidentified person during the peaceful march.

The security men dispersed the demonstrators. The political activists in al-Dhale called for peaceful silent march on the occasion of the 7th of July protesting the continuous detention of the political leaders in the South.

Its really sickening that arresting, beating and shooting are not enough, now its grenades. But the Yemeni government has no concern for any of its citizens anywhere in the nation, so its also unsurprising.

SANAA (AFP) — Six people were wounded in a grenade explosion in southern Yemen on Monday as police tried to break up a protest against high living costs in one of the poorest countries on the planet, witnesses told AFP.

Two of the wounded were taken to hospital in the port city of Aden after the blast in Dhaleh, some 130 kilometres (80 miles) away, they said.

The state news agency Saba said three people were wounded, including a policeman, and that a suspected assailant was arrested.

Police also intervened in Aden itself where dozens of demonstrators were rounded up as they tried to organise a protest in the centre of town, witnesses said.

The protests mark the first anniversary of widespread demonstrations in Yemen’s southern and eastern provinces to condemn the soaring cost of living and to demand better public services.

There has since been a spate of demonstrations in southern Yemen to call for greater state aid for the more than 60,000 people retired early from army or civil service jobs following a 1994 bid to restore the south’s independence. South Yemen united with the north in 1990. The bid to end the union four years later sparked a deadly civil war.

Jihaiddis Takfiring Socialists

Filed under: South, TI: Internal, YSP, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 2:57 pm on Friday, July 4, 2008

Another strange story, AKI

Sanaa, 26 June (AKI) - The authorities in Yemen have arrested 10 suspected al-Qaeda terrorists in two different police operations conducted in the capital Sanaa and in the desert area of Hadramawt, in the south of the country.

According to a report in London-based Arabic-language daily Al-Quds Al-Arabi, among those arrested was one of al-Qaeda in Yemen’s top leaders, Haytham Bin Saad.

Bin Saad was detained with four other extremists in Hadramawt on Wednesday, while five others were arrested in the capital.

Bin Saad was sent to the prison in Sayun pending his transfer to Sanaa.

Meanwhile also on Wednesday, leaflets containing Jihadi propaganda were distributed in the southern province of Ibb.

The leaflets accused the secretary of the Socialist Party, Yahya Mansour Abu Asba of being a “unbeliever” and a “Communist”.

Asba has been assigned a police escort as there is concern that al-Qaeda terrorists could try to kill him.

In recent months, the al-Qaeda organisation in Yemen has resurfaced, claiming responsibility for an the 18 March missile attack on the American embassy in Sanaa.

At a press conference on Tuesday, deputy prime minister Abdel Rabboh Mansur Hadi said the authorities in Yemen have over the past three years expelled 61,000 foreigners considered to be close to Islamic extremism.

Aden Security Warns Against Public Gatherings in Advance of July 7

Filed under: Civil Rights, South — by Jane Novak at 2:53 pm on Friday, July 4, 2008
Almotamar.net - The Aden Security Committee held Thursday its regular meeting chaired by governor Dr Adnan al-Jifri and discussed the topics on its agenda and reports related to security situation in the governorate. A statement issued by the committee said it has considered some reports in a newspaper concerning the intention of elements from some parties and a number of other groups of holding unlicensed and law-violating gatherings on the 7th of this month.

The statement added that in the light the responsibility dictated o the state apparatuses for keeping of the social peace and non-aggression on public and private property and commercial activities and for securing continuation of development movement in the city, as well as to stave off what hose illegal gatherings might cause of riot acts, the committee decided to prevent any gatherings or demonstrations having no official license. The committee also decided prevention of any groups or persons from outside the governor rate of holding any activities that disturb public peace and comfort of the city’s inhabitants. It has also warned and held responsible for any results all those who violate the law.

Blocking the roads again:

Sahwa Net –There have still been strains between the security and the Committee of Political Coordination which intends to hold a peaceful march in Aden. The organizers of the march say it is their right to hold a march to express their opinion refuse the current situation, demand to release all political prisoners from security jails and condemns the consequences of 1994 civil war.

Sahwa Net was informed that security forces in Aden deployed its members in Aden entries in order to prevent outside participators form coming to the governorate. It has used to do such measures before arranging protests, marches and sit-ins in Aden since 2007. Aden has witnessed many protests which claimed several lives in the current year.

The Talibanization of Yemen: Gender Mingling Draws Attack in Aden

Filed under: Civil Rights, Religious, South, Women's Issues — by Jane Novak at 8:41 am on Sunday, June 8, 2008

Talking to women in public: haram. It leads to sex in the street according to the fanatics.

Student attacked for walking with women
Friday 06 June 2008 / Mareb Press

A 23-year-old university student said he was beaten up for walking with a female friend in Aden in May.

“A bearded man attacked and slapped me while I was walking with my girl colleague, saying it’s haram to talk to women in the street,” said the student.

The student was going home from the Aden law college along with two boys and three girls when a group of religious men intercepted them and had a fight with them over “walking and talking” with girls in the street.

In an interview with Gulf News this week, the student, who asked not to be named, said: “When I asked the men why are you doing this, one of them rudely said, ‘Do you want us to wait until you have sex with her in the street?’”

(Read on …)

Protest in Dhalie Broken Up by Security

Filed under: South — by Jane Novak at 7:25 am on Tuesday, June 3, 2008

The trial of Baoum and the other two Socialist Party leaders is going to be a flash point in the South.

Sahwa Net – Dozens of unemployed people in Dhala province rallied in the main street of the province’s headquarters, demanding to release political prisoners and getting military checkpoints out from the city.

In a march, protestors raised photos of the activities leaders who are currently prosecuted.

Ahmed al-Zawkari, former member of Dhala’s local council said that security forces repressed a peaceful march and arrested several protestors.

Political Opposition Faces Death Penalty

Filed under: Civil Unrest, South, Trials, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 4:40 pm on Friday, May 30, 2008

This is a good comprehensive article on the trial of Baoum and the southern civil unrest where it remains illegal to chant slagans, in the north or in the south.

SANA’A, May 30 (The National)- Amid a crowd of opposition party members, democracy activists and lawyers, three senior members of the Yemen Socialist Party went on trial at the state security court yesterday.

(Read on …)

Hassan Baoum Charged in Penal Court with Treason

Filed under: Civil Rights, South, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 7:45 am on Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Updated: Bauom is being charged under the legal theory that because he organized the rallies, he is responsible for whatever happened after that, including when security forces shot protesters dead.

SANA’A, NewsYemen

State Specialized Penal Court I Sana’a started On Wednesday a trial of three leaders of the Yemeni Socialist Party over organizing demonstrations in south last April.

The Prosecution accused Hassan Ba-Oam, Yahya Ghalib al-Shoaibi and Ali Haitham al-Ghareeb of harming public security, encouraging people to organize rallies in public places and roads and arousing sedition amongst people of one country resulting in killings and injuries among people and security forces, in addition to damaging public and private properties.

(Read on …)

Releases and New Arrests in Aden

Filed under: Civil Rights, South, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 7:58 am on Sunday, May 25, 2008

Bauom? Not Bauom. (Bauom is a very ill man in jail and one of the leaders of the protest movement.) There has been broad civil unrest in southern Yemen for a year, with hundreds of thousands in the streets weekly. Dozens of protesters have been killed by security forces. Over 400 are in jail including activists, political party leaders, civil society workers and demonstrators. Hundreds more have been beaten and injured during the protests.

May 17, 2008
Alsahwa.net – Aden security forces have released on Saturday 19 detainees including three of the opposition’s leaders and the activist Afra al-Hariri who had arrested in the same day in Aden during a protest organized by the opposition parties, Joint meeting parties.

On the other hand, Alsahwa.net was informed that government orders were issued to crack down all streets of Sheikh Othman in order to repress any potential protests. Ensaf Mayo, Yemeni parliamentarian and a top opposition leader in Aden said that two policemen with civilian attires stayed before his house on Friday and prevented him from existing from his home, pointing out that the governor of Aden affirmed during a phone call with him that those orders were actually issued.

Dr. Abdullah al-Alimi and Dr. Saleh Yahya , top leaders of the Islah party in Aden and Qasem Dawood, secretary-assistant of the Yemeni Social Party in Aden as well as other citizens were also arrested as they were heading to al-Hashimi square to hold a protest there .

Totals in Southern Protests: 487 arrested

Filed under: A-AA-Human Rights, South, Yemen, political violence — by Jane Novak at 9:20 pm on Friday, May 9, 2008

I recorded 22 killed since August but the JMP is saying 25.

May 8, 2008

Alsahwa.net – Leadership of the Joint Meeting Parties has expressed discontent over the Yemeni authorities’ continuation in detaining JMP’s members and activists.

In a rally which was held on Wednesday and Thursday, JMP leaders said that the authorities suppressed their activities in various provinces, leaving 25 killed, 47 wounded and 487 arrested, victims of peaceful struggle, in 2007 alone.

At least 487 people were arrested, majority of them are from Lahj and al-Dhala’a governorates, according to the protestors.

Protests have spread across the country organized by JMP and former southern officers, but also triggered by the soaring cost of foodstuff.

Baoum is very sick, his family said in a release.

May 3, 2008

Alsahwa.net -Yemeni NGOs denounced Saturday political activists arrests in Aden, Dhala’a, Abayan, lahj, Hadhramout , Taiz and the secretariat capital .

In a sit-in , they expressed their refusal to attempts of militarizing civil life, imposing state of undeclared emergency and passing laws which aims to marginalize democracy.

In a statement, they declared their solidarity with political prisoners who were detained in a way which is inconsistent with all international conventions, demanding to immediately free top leaders of the Yemeni Social Parties Ali Monasar, Hassan Ba Oam , Yahya Ghalib as well as the comedian Fahd al-Qarni.

North- 8 killed, South-1 killed, 6 injured at Qat market

Filed under: Saada War, South, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 7:04 pm on Thursday, May 1, 2008

21 protesters to date.

Yemen Online

One killed, three injured in clashes between security forces and protesters in Radfan
Sana’a, April 29, 2008 (yemenonline.info) - A man was killed and three others were injured in clashes between protesters and security forces in the Radfan city in Lahj governorate.

Sources said that clashes broke out as protesters were attempting to break into a jai to release detained protesters.

Scuffle at Qat market
(Read on …)

Al-Qirby Around Gulf to Subdue Former Southern Leaders in Exile

Filed under: GCC, Saudi Arabia, South, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 7:59 pm on Saturday, April 26, 2008

YO

Yemen Foreign Minister, Abu Bakr al-Qirbi, paid a visit to the Gulf countries last week, carrying messages from the president to Gulf leaders.

In releases attributed to members in the minister’s delegation, it was said that the president’s messages requested the Gulf leaders to limit the number of Yemeni politicians living there who were accused of having links with the recent riots in the south. Sources added that deliberations with the Gulf countries is a normal phenomenon, since Yemen is the security essence for the Gulf and all that happens in Yemen has its impact on the Gulf countries.

(Read on …)

Minister Attacked in Papers

Filed under: GPC, Local gov, Ministries, South, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 10:08 am on Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Yemen Online

Sana’a, April 19, 2008 - Several government funded weeklies are launching a media campaign against Minister of local Administration, Abdulqader Hilal accusing him of corruption and leaking information to the opposition.

These newspapers reported that some government officials are working to prosecute minister Hilal for corruption charges and for leaking information to the opposition Joint Meeting Party (JMP).

The papers did not said what sort of information Hilal revealed to the opposition parties.

According to the newspapers Hilal is financing the so-called separation movement in the south.

Taiz-based A-Gomhoria government daily published an “alleged” interview with minister Hilal several days ago in which the paper “on behalf’s of Hilal” attacked political parties in the country.

The newspaper published and apology after Hilal denied that he did the interview and explained that the text of the interview was sent to the newspaper by a reporter working for the defense ministry-funded 26 September weekly.

A source close to minister Hilal expressed surprise over the media campaign government-funded media outlets are launching against Hilal. The source said that in protest minister Hilal is staying at home these days.

Minister Hilal enjoys good reputation and popularity mainly amidst people of the south. He served as southern Hadramawt governor before he assumes his current position as the minister of local administration.

Secessionists Prompted Riots

Filed under: Civil Unrest, South, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 9:23 pm on Sunday, April 13, 2008

Mareb Press

Governmental report reveals that secessionist elements from inside and outside Yemen have involved in the riots and sabotage acts taken place in some of the southern governorates of Yemen from March 30 to April 9.

According to the report, 22 soldiers were injured, a number of police cars, ambulances and citizens’ cars were destroyed, 75 shops were looted, and governmental facilities were burnt and looted.

The security apparatus in cooperation with prosecution have arrested the people who were involved in the riots. About 283 people had been arrested in the protests but 161 of them were released, the report added.

The report recited by the prime minister during the meeting of President Ali Abdullah Saleh with members of Parliament and Shura council mentioned the sabotages acts carried out by these elements in the southern provinces, the main of which are firing at the soldiers in Dhale’e province and Al Habilain in Lahj province, throwing bombs on the army vehicles, attacking citizens and travelers, cutting the main streets, sitting fires to wheels, looting and setting fire on the buildings of General People’s Congress party (GPC) in Lahj province, looting private and public properties and the shops, and chanting slogans against unity seeking to drive the country into sedition and fighting between the sons of Yemen.

The report considered these acts outlaw according to penalty law and the perpetrators of these sabotage acts should bring to justice to receive their fair penalty according to the law.

Three Injured in Dhalie Saturday

Filed under: South, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 8:36 pm on Saturday, April 12, 2008
The Associated Press
Saturday, April 12, 2008
DHALAE, Yemen: Anti-riot police wounded three south Yemen demonstrators when they opened fire Saturday to disperse thousands of protesters in the latest incident in the restive south, a southern activist said.

The shooting in the southern city of Dhalae comes amid almost daily violence across swathes of south Yemen, where southerners’ have staged a fortnight of protests which often turned violent, to demand equal treatment by northern-dominated government.

(Read on …)

Poet Chased

Filed under: Civil Rights, Security Forces, South, Targeted Individuals, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 9:25 pm on Friday, April 11, 2008

Ran out of comedians? al-Sahwa

April 13, 2008- Yemen’s security services have been following up a poet, Fuad al-Himiari, since two weeks on charges of sedition and inciting.

Al-Himiari had delivered a speech in a rally organized by the opposition party in Sana’a in which he slammed the government and the ruling party.

Last week, a well known comedic artist, Fahd al-Qarni was arrested on the same charges.

Unrest in Dhala, Radfan and major southern cities in Yemen

Filed under: Civil Unrest, South, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 7:33 am on Friday, April 11, 2008

Guest Post:

Yemen is on the verge of another civil war if the regime continues to use excessive use of force against citizens and prohibits democracy.

Please pay your utmost attention to the content of this email as it contains important information.

Background information:

Last March the people in southern regions of Yemen have marked the elapse of one year since the start of their peaceful demonstration and rally against the ill-treatment, inequality and discriminations of the Yemeni regime against the people of south Yemen. The majority of officials and government personnel in the current Yemeni regime are inhabitants of what was called the Yemen Arab Republic (YAR) before the unification in 1990 with Public Democratic Republic of Yemen (PDRY).

Since the civil war in 1994 and the northern army took control of the southern regions of Yemen. The regime guaranteed and assured the international community during security council meeting in 1994, to preserve equality, reinstate law and order and finally compensate and repossess properties which were confiscated by northern high rank army and government officials. In the contrary, the regime has been treating southern people as second or even third class citizen and there have been numerous and outrageous decisions by the current regime against southerners, some of those decisions were:

1. Ejection of tens of thousands of soldiers and civil personnel from their jobs with no legal reason.

2. Confiscation of lands and properties of people of the south Yemen.

3. Ill-treatment of people and perverting the course of justice.

4. Use of force with any outspoken demand of rights.

The regime and members of Yemeni President Ali Abdulla Saleh and his close elite have monopolised Yemen main source of income and revenues. Also, President Saleh’s elite have confiscated the binding treaty and agreements between the (YAR) and Public Democratic Republic of Yemen (PDRY) which took place prior to unification in 1990.

The full picture

Since March 2007, the people of the south have been demonstrating against the aggression, oppression and injustice the regime has been practising against them for the past 13 years. So, March 2008, a year has past since the start of the peaceful demonstrations of people of the south Yemen in pursuit of democracy, justice and equality accomplishing self-determination and national referendum. During this year, the demonstrators have gone through difficult times where more than ten people shot dead in various regions by security forces and hundreds were detained but then released later.

Facts and Figures since 1st of April 2008

The government and current regime declared war against democracy and failed to tackle the demands by peaceful means and a more civilised manner as normally pursued by governments around the world. This regime knows only one way to engage with the demands of citizens. This method is the use of state terrorism and the use of prohibited weapons against unarmed and peaceful demonstrators as stated in many international treaties and Universal Declaration of Human Rights. For the purpose of providing a more realistic picture to the situation in Yemen in the past months and particularly last week or so, I have divided escalated situations into regions, as depicted below:

Saada region:

In this region a war broke out between inhabitants and Yemeni army which deployed all types of warfare weapons. The war is still ongoing which claimed hundreds if not thousands of innocent lives. This was simply due to the provocative regime failed to solve a minor dispute at the time. Reports from soldiers who served in the army provided horrific stories that without any doubts indicate violation of international treaties and could be considered as war crimes. Unfortunately, the world turned a blind eye to the atrocities took place which claimed lives of children, women and elderly.

Thus, since there was no condemnation largely by international decision makers, the regime with no hesitation could commit other atrocities in the southern regions.

Since the 1st of April 2008, the regime has committed the following acts of international violations in the regions below on a daily basis until the time of writing this report:-

Aden region:

The security forces detained leaders of the southern movements since the first of April without charge and no one until this moment knows their whereabouts. The names are as follows:

1. Hassan Ba-Aoom (civil right activist and suffers from many serious illnesses)

2. Yahia Ghaleb (solictor and civil right activist)

3. Ahmed bin Fareed (journalist and civil right activist)

4. Ali Munasser (Socialist Party memeber and civil right activist)

Lahj region:

The students of Saber University have demonstrated against the oppression and excessive use of force and siege that segregated Dhala and Radfan from the rest of Yemeni regions and decalaration of State Emergency. On a daily basis demonstrations took the streets of Lahj region and it has been reported that Dr. Mohsen Kassim Waheeb a lecturer in Saber’s university has been detained in Lahj security prison until the time of writing this report.

Dhala region:

However, the situation escalated since the 1st of April where state of emergency has been declared in Dhala after the security forces opened fire, wounding one person and detained demonstrators which angered other people who then set tyres on fire and blocked the main street with stones and large objects disconnecting Sana’a – Aden main route. Tanks took up positions within the city main gateways and jets broke the sound barrier with hundreds of security forces patrolling the streets where a curfew has been implemented that segregated Dhalas’ main districts.

The curfew has prevented people from getting their daily necessities such as food and water from shops and markets. The people of Dhala have been destitute and human crisis have escalated where the live of tens of thousands of people inhabit this region.

It has been known that the security forces have orders to arrest 40 civil right activists and are looking for 3 leaders of southern movement, those names are as follows: (Read on …)

Secret Prisons in Yemen

Filed under: Civil Rights, South, Yemen, prisons — by Jane Novak at 9:25 pm on Thursday, April 10, 2008

News Yemen

4/22

SANA’A, NewsYemen

The Sana’a-based Yemeni Observatory for Human Rights (YOHR) revealed in a press released on Tuesday that many detainees whom security authorities have arrested in the aftermath of protests in south Yemen are still in custody in prisons, some of them are unknown.

It said that five people are kept in a prison in Hadramout, nine in Aden and 32 in Lahj. It added that security authorities also detained seven students on Monday and put took them to secret prisons.
The press release accused security authorities of disallowing the observatory team to visit prisoners in known detentions, calling for disclosing prisons where students and other prisoners are held.

Also several hundred Houthis supporters and uninvolved bystanders.

Expat Yemenis Stirring Unrest: Interior Minister

Filed under: Political Opposition, South, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 2:51 pm on Thursday, April 10, 2008

Mareb Press

Yemeni Interior Minister Rashad Al Alimi has said the ongoing violent protests in southern provinces are receiving support from outside.

Those behind the protests were “just a few of demagogues and rabble-rousers” who are backed by some Yemenis living abroad, the minister said in a report submitted to the parliament, a copy of which was obtained by Gulf News.

The minister also said that the opposition media have contributed to stirring up the riots and violence.

Absence of a dialogue over political issues between the opposition and government, as well as the high poverty and unemployment rates, were also among the reasons behind the violent protests, according to the report.

MP Abdul Kareem Shaiban said that the riots were the result of accumulation of political crises since 1994. “Some government officials have held up a lot of lands in the southern governorates,” the MP said.

“Tens of thousands of southerners who were in the Army and university professors were ousted from their posts after the civil war of 1994,” he added during the parliament session.

Meanwhile, a group of activists and politicians mostly from opposition organised a demonstration at the gate of the cabinet while it was holding its weekly meeting. They demanded the release of the activists who were arrested in the protests.

Targeted: Six hurt in Bomb attack

Six soldiers were wounded in a bomb attack on their checkpoint in a town in south Yemen where violent job protests have raged for 10 days, a security official said.

“Two of them are in a critical condition … They were wounded in an bomb attack,” the official said. Fifteen people suspected of involvement in the attack are being questioned.

International Condemnation of Al-Wasat’s Closure

Filed under: Civil Rights, Media, Ministries, South, Targeting, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 9:53 am on Tuesday, April 8, 2008

CPJ

Yemeni government cancels license of independent weekly

New York, April 7, 2008—The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns an order by the Yemeni government this weekend to cancel the license of the independent weekly newspaper Al-Wasat.

On Saturday, Yemeni Information Minister Hassan al-Lawzi ordered the newspaper’s license terminated because the paper had damaged relations with Saudi Arabia, and violated technical provisions of the press law, according to local journalists and official press accounts.

A Yemeni government spokesman who asked that his name not be used told CPJ that the Information Ministry revoked Al-Wasat’s license because the paper had “published articles threatening national unity, and spreading messages that promote violence and hate. Yemen supports the freedom of the press that adheres to professional standards and practices.”

“Contrary to the government’s lofty statements in support of a free press such shameful acts of censorship have regrettably become the norm in Yemen,” said CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon. “We call on the Yemeni authorities to reverse this flagrant measure immediately.”

(Read on …)

Second Checkpoint Attack Injures Soldiers in South

Filed under: Civil Unrest, Military, Security Forces, South, Yemen, political violence — by Jane Novak at 8:48 am on Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Bomb attack, last time it was RPG’s.

SANAA, April 8 (Reuters) - Six soldiers were wounded in a bomb attack on their checkpoint in a town in south Yemen where violent job protests have raged for 10 days, a security official said.

“Two of them are in a critical condition … They were wounded in an bomb attack last night (Monday),” the official told Reuters.

Fifteen people suspected of involvement in the attack are being questioned. The official gave no further details about the incident in Lahj province near Aden, the Arab country’s main port city.

Rioting by youths demanding jobs has erupted in several southern towns over the past 10 days. Politicians have said they are concerned the unrest could be used to drum up calls for the secession of the south, home of Yemen’s oil industry.

One soldier was killed and seven people were wounded on Monday when government forces clashed with protesters in Dalea province.

State jobs or joining the army are among the main sources of employment in Yemen, one of the poorest countries outside Africa. More than half the workforce is in the agricultural sector and one diplomat estimated unemployment at 17 percent.

Mareb Press Reporter Arrested for Reporting on Protests

Filed under: Civil Unrest, Media, South, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 8:03 am on Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Ran out of comedians to harass?

Mareb Press:

Members of the political security ( intelligence ) arrested Sunday the correspondent of Mareb Press, news website, Muneer al-Akhali, in Taiz provine.

Al-Akhali was covering the protests in Taiz province which demanded the release of the popular singer Fahed al-Qarni.

Al-Akhali confirmed to Mareb press that he received personal threats with the detention from the head of political security in Taiz province, after reports in the website that al-Qarni was arrested according to higher instructions.

On his part, the editor-in chief of the Mareb Press, Ahmed Ayad, condemned the detention of al-Akhali and demanded the minister of interior and head of political security to release of AlAkhali.

Violence Flares on Multiple Fronts in Yemen

Filed under: Al-Qaeda, Saada War, South, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 12:03 pm on Monday, April 7, 2008

Twenty-one persons died in political violence across Yemen this week-end, including southern protesters, northern rebels, tribal paramilitary fighters and Yemeni soldiers. A mortar attack by al-Qaeda in the capital heightened tensions.

In coordinated attacks on Friday, gunmen attacked two security checkpoints in the southern Hadramout province. One soldier died and seven were injured. An interior ministry official indicated that drug smugglers may have been responsible without ruling out the possibility of an al-Qaeda attack.

In the northern Yemen, new skirmishes in the three year Sa’ada war left 18 dead. In southern Yemen on Sunday, security forces killed two protesters following a week of riots that left 14 injured. Also on Sunday, Westerners were targeted by mortars launched at a residential compound housing foreigners in Sana‘a, the capital. No injuries were reported. Al-Qaeda in Yemen claimed responsibility on Monday Yemeni officials reported.

In response to mounting national unrest, on Friday the Yemeni government arrested a popular comedian, Fahd al-Qarni. The Information Ministry revoked the license of a leading independent newspaper, al-Wasat, on Saturday. Internationally renowned journalist and democracy advocate Abdulkarim Al-Khaiwani is on trial in Yemen’s specialized terrorism court, charged with “demoralizing the military“ with an unpublished article and photographs of civilian causalities in the Sa’ada War.

The fighting in Sa’ada, north Yemen, between Zaidi Shiite rebels and pro-government tribal fighters which broke out on Saturday continued into Sunday. Twelve rebels and six tribesmen died. It was the latest in a series of skirmishes that threatens to undermine a cease fire negotiated in June. The rebels refuse to leave their mountain top positions until military forces vacate occupied rebel farms and homes. Despite government pledges, hundreds of Zaidis remain imprisoned for suspected sympathy with the rebels, and the province of 700,000 remains under blockade with promised reconstruction yet to begin.

RPG rounds destroyed the vacant home of a top Yemeni rabbi in the al-Salem area of Sa‘ada on Saturday. Last year, about 45 members of Yemen’s tiny Jewish community were relocated from Sa’ada to a tourist center in the capital at the government’s expense. With over 50,000 internal refugees in Sa’ada, the UN Children’s fund will begin an outreach program this week. Most of the displaced families are malnourished with many living in tents.

In southern province of Abyan on Sunday, security forces fired into a crowd of demonstrators, killing two. Twenty southern demonstrators were killed by police since demonstrations began in August 2007, and a new law holds protest organizers liable for the deaths. In response to widespread riots last week, the military deployed 40 tanks and 100 military vehicles to southern governorates and established numerous security checkpoints. Hundreds were arrested, including activists, opposition party leaders, university professors and protest organizers.

On Monday large demonstrations erupted in Dhalie, Taiz, Habileen, Karish and Zunjubar, and fourteen protesters and two policemen were injured in clashes. The crowds were demanding the release of activists imprisoned over the week-end.

Despite regime claims of external interference, the year long series of demonstrations in the south is prompted by popular frustration over institutionalized discrimination and illegal practices by northern government officials including the theft of land , property and resources. Southerners are increasingly calling for self-determination and an end to an oppressive northern military presence in the south.

On Sunday, al-Qaeda operatives launched several mortars at a residential compound housing western oil workers and diplomats in south-west Sana’a. Two weeks ago, al-Qaeda operatives targeted the US embassy in Sana’a with mortars, injuring several school girls when the mortars landed in a nearby school yard. One policeman was killed.

On Monday, Yemen announced the arrest of Abdullah al-Reimi, described as a senior al-Qaeda leader by Yemen’s Defense Ministry which said al-Reimi was involved in several recent terror attacks. Al-Reimi was among 23 al-Qaeda operatives who escaped in February 2006 from a maximum security prison. Al-Qaeda has become increasing active in Yemen since the escape.

The prisoners reportedly broke through a concrete floor with eating utensils and tunneled hundreds of yards to exit in the woman’s bathroom of a nearby mosque. After the prison break, Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh announced he was personally negotiating with the escapees for their return.

Terrorists who voluntarily surrendered to Saleh were subsequently released on the security guarantees of family members and in exchange for a pledge not to mount attacks within Yemen. Some were given jobs, cars, money and even wives in what Yemen claims is a pragmatic bid to reintegrate extremists into society.

Among the escapees was Jamal al-Badawi who was sentenced to death in Yemeni court for his role in the 2000 terror attack on the destroyer, USS Cole, which killed 17 US service members and injured 49 others in the port of Aden. Al-Badawi’s sentence was later reduced to 15 years in jail. In October 2007, al-Badawi surrendered to authorities and was released, provoking strong protests from the US government. The Yemeni government claims al-Badawi was re-imprisoned after being allowed a short visit with his family.

A spate of terror attacks since the prison break has been blamed on several escapees who remained at large, including al-Reimi. A few days prior to Yemen’s September 2006 presidential election, two teams of suicide car bombers were thwarted as they approached their targets, oil facilities. Alert security guards shot at the approaching cars which exploded, and the potential bombers were killed. Yemen declined a US offer of forensic assistance and identified two of the escapees as among the dead.

A suicide car bombing by a teen-ager in July 2007 in Marib claimed the lives of eight Spanish tourists and two Yemeni tour guides. In January 2008, gunmen sprayed a tourist caravan in Hadramout, killing two Belgian women. It is unclear which attacks al-Reimi is suspected of or if he will be released on a security guarantee following the announcement of his arrest.

In internet postings, a group calling itself al-Qaeda in Yemen, or the Yemen Soldiers Brigade, claimed responsibility for the murders of the tourists and the recent mortar attack on the US Embassy. The group is led by Nasir al-Wahayshi, one of the February 2006 escapees and a former secretary to Usama bin Laden. The group claims to reject negotiations with the Yemeni government. Al-Qaeda in Yemen released its first propaganda video in March 2008.

Instability in Yemen can be expected to sharply increase in coming years as the nation’s natural resources decline. Oil, which constitutes over 70 per cent of governmental revenue, will run dry in less than a decade and efforts at economic diversification have fallen flat. Yemen is also among the most water scarce nations globally. Ground water is being depleted at a far greater rate than it is replenished. Water rivalry is a primary precursor of tribal violence and civil unrest which can be expected to increase as both wells and oil run dry.

- Jane

MP al-Shanfarah Wanted for Sedition

Filed under: Parliament, South, Yemen, political violence — by Jane Novak at 11:55 am on Monday, April 7, 2008

Yemen Times:

The attacks came after Salah Al-Shanfarah, a Parliament member and prominent leader in the Yemeni Socialist Party, threatened to resort to armed struggle and revolution against the state authorities. In a statement last Friday in Al-Dhale’, Al-Shanfarah said, “We shall announce revolution and armed struggle in the mountains of Al-Dhale’, Yafei, and Radfan.”

“They [state's leaders] should know that our areas are not like those of Sa’ada and our men are not like Al-Houthi’s, whom we highly respect. We have military plans that are accurate and scientific that can destroy their [state's leaders] army,” he added.

He further noted that if the blockade continues and security forces conduct attacks on citizens’ homes arbitrarily, then locals of Al-Dhale’ province will carry out operations that target high-ranking figures in the state.

“Al-Dhale’ city is about to see a large humanitarian crisis if southerners do not move now,” said Al-Shanfarah. “You southerners go to your positions in Radfan, Al-Dhale’, Yafei, Al-Mahfad, Mukairas, Baihan and all the cities bordering northern Yemen that occupied our land and country,” he said.

Interior Ministry asks Prosecution to lift immunity of MP al-Shanfara
Monday, 07-April-2008
Almotamar.net - The Yemen Ministry of Interior on Monday requested from the Yemeni General Prosecution lifting the parliamentary immunity of MP Salah al-Shanfara. Deputy Premier, the Minister of Interior Dr Rashad al-Alimi said in a parliament closed-door meeting on Monday the Ministry requested the lifting of parliamentary immunity of MP al-Shanfara in order to arrest him and refer him to justice over his involvement in the destruction and riot acts happened in Al-Dhalie city recently.

26september.net has quoted a security source as saying al-Shanfara is accused of being involved in the riot and sabotage acts in the city of Al-Dhalie in the past days and for his behaviour and statements that are considered a violation of the constitution and the law. In his statements he has called for an armed revolt for confroinmgting the state’s authorities and instigating sedition, rousing hatred and threatening the national unity in addition to his threatening of suicide operations and targeting armed forces and security.
It is to be recalled that al-Shanfara is among the most wanted persons over the acts of riot and destruction in Al-Dhalie and he is still at large while security authorities are chasing him for arrest and sending to judiciary authorities.

Security forces have on Monday seized 52 pieces of weapon, among them snipers when some sabotage elements attempted to storm a security checkpoint on Dhalie-Qataba road. One soldier was killed and other four were wounded in addition to injury of two persons in confrontation between security forces and a group of young persons in unrest act carried out by those persons.

Dhalie Protests Continue

Filed under: Civil Unrest, South, Yemen — by Jane Novak at 11:02 am on Monday, April 7, 2008

And it goes on, five soldiers and two citizens injured in Dhalie. It is unclear who would have the motivation to cut the electricity.

Almotamar.net - Sabotage elements in Al-Dhalie have Sunday cut high tension electric power posts that connect electric power to Danat district of Dhalie governorate. Director of electricity station in Al-Dhalie Saif Saleh Hamoud said today he has received a report by a driver of garbage truck in Qaataba yesterday on the fall of electric posts in the area.

He added that he immediately reported the incident to security authorities and electricity workers rushed to the area of the incident and they found out that the sabotage act was done with large saws. Saleh also said investigation was conducted to know who have committed that criminal act.

On the other hand five soldiers and two citizens were wounded during an attempt by security forces in Dhalie today to foil chaos operations which a group of young persons began to carry out there.

A group of outlaws have today tried to storm a security checkpoint in Dhalie on Dhalie-Qaataba road.

More injuries, SANAA, April 7 (AFP)

10 police among 21 hurt in Yemen clashes: witnesses
At least 21 people, 10 of them policemen, were injured in southern Yemen on Monday during renewed clashes between security forces and thousands of protesters, witnesses said.

The clashes broke out in the provinces of Lahij and Dhaleh, which have been the scene of demonstrations and riots for more than a week after residents took to the streets to protest at the army’s refusal to enrol would-be recruits from the area.

Six policemen were hurt while dispersing protesters in the province of Dhaleh, where demonstrations were held in the towns of Dhaleh and Shuaib, the witnesses said.

Another four policemen were injured in the town of Habilayn in Lahij, where protesters hurled a hand grenade at police near a dais used by protest leaders.

A high-level committee dispatched by President Ali Abdullah Saleh meanwhile arrived in Lahij to “help the local government restore security and stability in the area,” a provincial official told AFP.

Five cities

DPA Sana̵