Showing posts with label GCC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GCC. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Yemen’s Turbulent Transitional Year







2011 was a year of revolution in Yemen, characterized by massive peaceful marches that were seldom met with security forces’ brutality, subsequently leading to the ouster of Ali Abdullah Saleh after a 33-year rule. In exchange for immunity Saleh, transferred power to his deputy of 18 years Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi, through a Gulf brokered deal, backed by the U.S , the U.N and the international community. On February 27th Hadi was appointed as president after a one man election.

Many Yemenis were discontented with this settlement yet after a long year of  bloodshed, clashes and interrupted services they were eagerly longing for peace, security and stability and hoping for a smooth political transition. The year 2012, was far from that, it  was a year of turmoil in Yemen. This year Yemen witnessed an unprecedented numbers of assassinations, kidnappings, car explosions, suicide bombings, attacks on electricity cables and gas pipelines, a deterioration of both the economic and humanitarian conditions, besides an increase in US drone attacks.

Throughout the year more than 60 Yemeni intelligence officers and military commanders were killed across the country, mostly in Sana’a and Aden, either by a car explosion or by unknown gunmen on a motorcycle. Although most of the killings were attributed to al-Qaeda, yet futile government investigations did not result into any findings.

The fragile security and lawlessness in Yemen led to an increase in kidnappings. In March, a Saudi diplomat, Abdallah al-Khalidi was kidnapped. A Swiss woman teacher was also captured in March in the portal city of Hodeida, both are still missing until today. In April, a French Red Cross aid worker was abducted and later released unharmed. In an unprecedented deterioration in Decemeber, an Austrian man and a Finnish couple were also kidnapped in broad daylight in the city center of the capital Sanaa.

Several attacks on the cables in the main electric supply station in Mareb left Yemen in the dark for several hours, sometimes days until the cable was repeatedly repaired. Tribal militia-men were suspected to be behind these recurrent attacks yet the government was too weak and the military too divided to secure those lines. The last month of December also witnessed the eighth attack on the LNG (Liquid Natural Gas) pipelines since the first sabotage on the line in October 2011. Repeated attacks this year limited the production of the gas and crippling the economy further. According to the Petroleum and Minerals Minister Hisham Abdullah, Yemen lost more than $4 billion (3.1 billion euros) in revenues since February 2011 due to such attacks.

The prolonged political crisis, lack of services, economic instability, rise in prices and unemployment were all factors which led to deepening the food crisis further which had already existed prior to the events of 2011. According to a recent report by UNICEF Yemen, about 60 percent of Yemeni children were chronically malnourished and about 15 percent – 257 thousand children under the age of five – suffer from acute malnourishment.

A sharp increase in US drone attacks  was also noted this year, it rose  to 53 from 18 in 2011. Not surprisingly since Yemen’s President Hadi himself, during his last visit to the US, praised these strikes and claimed their effectiveness. Yet many Yemenis  condemn them and  consider them a violation to Yemen’s sovereignty. Contrary to what the US administration wishes to believe these attacks have created animosity towards the US. Many Yemenis and Yemen experts have written extensively how the increase in US strikes has had an adverse reaction and has helped al-Qaeda grow in size.  
Gregory Johnsen, who wrote ‘The Last Refuge”, a book on Yemen and al Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, in a recent interview  said “Essentially what the U.S. is doing is bombing suspected AQAP targets in Yemen in the hopes that AQAP doesn’t bomb the U.S.,”  he added “In my view, this is neither sustainable nor wise. We have seen AQAP grow incredibly fast in a remarkably short amount of time, expanding from 200-300 fighters in 2009, when the U.S. bombing campaign began, to more than 1,000 fighters today. That is more exacerbating and expanding the threat than it is disrupting, dismantling and defeating it.” Many Yemenis question why haven’t suspected targets been captured and prosecuted instead of being remotely eliminated, often killing civilians in the process. A further increase in drone strikes in 2013 is expected unless there is a miraculous change in the US counter-terrorism policy or Yemen's puppet government takes a firm stand and condemns these attacks. 

One of the main demands of the popular youth revolution was the dismissal of Saleh’s relatives and former henchmen from top military and security command positions and the restructuring of the military. Hence President Hadi’s decrees to dismiss Saleh’s nephew, Yehya Saleh, head of the counter-terror unit and central security forces and to disband the Republican Guards headed by Saleh’s eldest son Ahmed and the First Armored Division headed by Ali Muhsin and reshuffling them into the central command of the defense ministry and restructuring the army into four components: ground forces, navy, air forces and border guards were widely celebrated and supported. Yet that jubilation did not last long,  to the dismay of many, reports emerged that both Ahmed Saleh and Ali Muhsin would be offered senior positions in the new military restructure. “Fortunately, Brigadier General Ahmad Saleh seems to have agreed to be given the command of a military region in an institutional reshuffle,” said an editorial. The popular demand to purge the Salehs and Ali Muhsin from any military positions was apparently disregarded once more. This will certainly be a slap in the face to the revolution and will further anger the youth who marched again this year from Taiz to Sanaa (270km), commemorating the martyrs and reviving the demands of the first life march in 2011, which include removing these notorious leaders.

Yemen is currently preparing for a six-month National Dialogue Conference which had been faced with challenges and setbacks resulting in it's postponement several times. After a participating quota for the political parties and groups was finally reached, the conference is due to start sometime early next year, despite reports that some Southern secessionists are still boycotting the Dialogue. Although the UN envoy, Jamal Bin Omar before heading back to New York , reportedly,urged all Yemeni parties to avoid any acts that may hinder the national dialogue and the progress of the political process in Yemen” yet the ousted president appears determined to participate in the upcoming National Dialogue. A press statement from the office of Ali Abdullah Saleh the head of the General People’s Congress, posted on the official website  of the GNC party announced “ the leader (Saleh), will head the body of representatives of the GPC to the national dialogue conference.” Only in Yemen would an ousted president be granted an immunity and be allowed to participate in a national dialogue that would shape the future of the country and outline it’s new constitution. Speculations as usual about Saleh's upcoming trip and the destination he is headed to (Oman, KSA, Italy?) are currently surfacing once more in Yemen.

The volatile security situation that has plagued Yemen over the past year was
mainly to the weak military structure,  and the divided and opposing military factions spearheaded by Ahmed Saleh and Ali Muhsin. Any military restructure that has these two leaders in it will recreate the same bloody scenario. Yemen’s security and stability requires their final removal from any military position and hence severing any loyalties to either side. The removal of Saleh from Yemen, and prohibiting him from playing any political role that can further destabilize the country is a crucial and crystal clear necessity now, which the GCC plan should have initially incorporated. The GCC, UN and the international community have an obligation now to rectify this grave miscalculation and hold Saleh and his loyalists accountable for Yemen’s instability in the past year and impose strict sanctions on them, not just empty threats. Yemen mostly needs the prompt delivery of the $6 billion that was pledged at the “Friends of Yemen” conference which is necessary to assist in it’s development through sustainable long term income generating projects and not in the form of short term aid.

The path is still long and arduous for Yemen, yet it’s youth are still peacefully calling for change and are determined to continue demanding what they originally set out to achieve - equal rights, liberty, freedom from oppression and a dignified life, which the team in SupportYemen had conveyed in this video at the beginning of the revolution:




Monday, February 20, 2012

Why We Reject Yemen's Elections

We reject Yemen's election for many obvious reasons, and one of them is that it will not remove Saleh's family from power. Have a good look at this graph to know how dominating the Saleh's are in Yemen.



Yemenis have been peacefully protesting in millions for an entire year calling for change and demanding the fall of the regime. Yet Yemenis instead got an imposed transitional power deal, brokered by the GCC and backed by the US, UN and EU which did not address any of the revolution's demandsThere is nothing in the GCC deal that explicitly outlines how the dominating Saleh family will be handing over their power, yet it only focuses on the president's role and gives him supreme powers instead. The GCC deal itself can not be challenged and supersedes Yemen's constitutions and laws.
Those who reject the elections don't feel that this farce of an election, albeit ending Saleh's 33 year rule as president, will bring about any major needed change in Yemen as long as him family and his regime are still in power. Along with his granted immunity, Saleh who is still head of the GPC ruling party can freely run again for any role, and his son too. Nor do they have faith in Hadi, the sole candidate, Saleh's loyal vice president for the last 18 years whom he selected as his successor, because he lacks the ability and perhaps the inclination to bring about that change. 
More and above, sadly, no real change can happen as long as Yemen is under the US and KSA's hegemony. Yemen will never own its' decision making nor will it be able to plan it's own future, but will be run according to other agendas. 

As Sultan Al Qassemi nicely put it in his tweet: 

Only an election orchestrated by the Arab Gulf States can get away with having one single candidate. 

Pity my nation indeed....






Saturday, November 26, 2011

Mixed Reactions as Saleh Finally Signs GCC Deal


After backing out three consecutive times, Yemen's President Saleh finally signed the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) brokered deal for him to step down and transfer power to Vice President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, in a ceremony in Riyadh on November 23, 2011, attended by Saudi King Abdullah.
There have been mixed reactions amongst Yemenis and others towards the signing of the deal; some are disappointed and skeptical, while others are joyful and relieved.
Mixed reactions
Revolutionary youth Ibarhim Alsaydi expresses the country's young people's rejection clearly in a interview on Al Jazeera English (video posted to YouTube by revaluationvoice):
Twitter user @samwaddah tweets an article by Reuters, which highlights the concerns of many analysts regarding the deal:
Analysis: #Saleh, quitting or dancing on the heads of snakesreuters.com/article/2011/1… #Yemen
The official copy of the GCC deal was not published and many do not know what it consists of. So far only the mechanism of the deal has been revealed.
@samwaddah tweets:
Until this moment, Yemenis are still kept in the dark on the actual #GCCdeal. Only the mechanism was published, not the actual deal #Yemen
Omar Mashjari points out his objection to the deal in his blog post:
@OmarMash: New BLOGPOST! - What does the GCC Initiative mean for the Yemeni people? by @OmarMash #Yemen #Saleh #GCC bit.ly/uRrE3j
@C0C0SASA tweeted a photo of a Arabic newspaper AlRai showing Saleh's image on the front page alongside the headline “Former President”:
Arabic newspaper AlRai's front page depicting Saleh and the headline "Former President". Image by Twitter user @C0C0SASA.
Arabic newspaper AlRai's front page depicting Saleh and the headline "Former President". Image by Twitter user @C0C0SASA.
الرئيس السابق…. #yemen #Salehpic.twitter.com/0D5LoNxH
Columnist Nick Kristof sarcastically expresses his cautious relief:
@NickKristof: After 33 years of misruling Yemen, Pres. Saleh is stepping down. Let's hope that the pieces can be put together again.
@Nadaa2124 tweets Brian Whitaker's article in the Guardian, pointing that there has been no concrete change:
Yemen's Ali Abdullah #Saleh resigns – but it changes little | Brian Whitakergu.com/p/33tjz/tw #Yemen #yf #GCC
@Nefermaat admits that not much has been achieved but encourages people instead to focus on what lies ahead:
#Yemen now that #Saleh signed (even if no change) maybe we'll be able to focus on more important things for the future of our country
@AbdulazizSakkaf - supporting the deal - points out:
Like the #GCCdeal or not, it saved your house, job and existence.
@Dory_Eryani who also supports the deal, claims:
There is media war by Janadi&others to make ppl refuse the #GCC deal ..Don't believe them..Saleh lost a lot when he signed it! #Yemen
However @RealistChannel points out what some Yemenis are simply overlooking:
#Saleh signed the #GCC's initiative because he knew his rule isn't over. Not that complicated. #SupportYemen
Anti-deal protests
Many of Yemen's young people rejected the deal and planned to go on marches across Yemen to protest it. @yemen_updates tweeted:
A strong movement at #Sanaa Change Sq. against the JMP & Islah for signing the #GCCdeal that grants #Saleh immunity from prosecution. #yemen
The day after the GCC initiative signing, violence continued in the capital Sanaa, as pro-Saleh supporters shot at peaceful protesters who were marching to reject the deal. In this video the cameraman himself is shot at towards the end of the clip. (video posted to YouTube bymediacentersanaa):
@YusraAlA aslo tweeted:
A day after #Saleh signed #Gulf Initiative, his thugs attacked march in #Sanaa resultin in death of 5 n injury of more than 30 #Yemen #yf
@samwaddah said:
5 martyrs so far, many injured in today's march in #Sanaa! This is the first fruit of the #GCCdeal #Yemen
The Saudi orchestrated GCC initiative clearly does not address the demands of the country's young people, who are the backbone of the revolution; what will it really accomplish for Yemen; does it really end Saleh's rule or does it hide more unpleasant surprises?
*This post was first published in Global Voices, November 25th, 2011

Thursday, November 24, 2011

The Yemeni Youth reject the GCC deal

There were many reactions upon Yemen's president's Saleh signature to the GCC deal in Riyadh yesterday, some were joyful and relieved and the majority like myself were disappointed. As this report by AljazeeraEnglish shows: 


The GCC initiative did not address nor serve the demands of Yemen's peaceful Youth who are the backbone of the Revolution, instead it benefited Saleh, his regime and those who were involved with them.
The revolution demanded the fall of the regime, not Saleh only, yet the GCC deal allows the regime to exist but in a different form. Many reject the initiative for offering Saleh impunity. Ibrahim Alsaydi, one of the revolutionary youth expresses this clearly on AljazeeraEnglish in this video:


Nobody knows for sure what the GCC agreement consists of and many are left to wonder what was it that made Saleh happily agree to sign it this time, after backing off three previous times. 




A statement expressing the views of the majority of the people in the squares of Change and Freedom throughout Yemen by CCYR, reads as follows:

Sana'a, 23 Nov—The Civil Coalition of Youth Revolution (CCYR) announced rejection of the Gulf's agreement on Yemeni crisis, which was signed by President Saleh's regime and the opposition Wednesday in Riyadh.

The statement said that the agreement "has provided immunity to the regime, which enabled him to continue killing during the last period and it also will provide the regime's officials a chance of unaccountability and unpunished, as well as being make it as a future partner able to disrupt the desired change." 
It stressed refusal of what it called "concessions" made by the opposition factions that signed the deal. It renewed adherence to the goals of the peaceful revolution and continuation of the revolution until "overthrow the authoritarian regime of president Saleh, bring them to trial and establishing the foundations of a modern, civil and democratic state". Click here to read more.



Last night, a couple of hours after the initiative was signed many marched in Taiz rejecting that deal and condemning the opposition (JMP) for signing it and calling it a day of the "Beginning of the Revolution."



Today in Sanaa, marches condemning the GCC deal were attacked by Saleh forces, resulting in five killed and at least 30 injured.  This video shows Saleh thugs opening fire on peaceful protesters in today's march in Sanaa, just a day after the agreement was signed. Is this is the first implementation of the agreement?!


Noble Peace Prize Laureate Tawakkol Karman, along with many who started this revolution rejected the GCC initiative months ago, from Change square in Sanaa,  "the revolution announces it's complete rejection of the initiative and confirms it's resolute demand which is the fall of the entire regime now and all it's symbols".



The revolution did not end with the signing of the GCC initiative. Marches are planned all over Yemen and the world to express Yemeni people's rejection to the initiative.

Follow and RT the hashtag #No2GCCdeal
Read the storify  

Related links: 
http://www.amnestyusa.org/news/news-item/yemen-no-immunity-for-serious-violations-under-president-saleh
http://mideast.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2011/11/10/time_to_freeze_saleh_s_assets
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/nov/24/yemen-ali-abdullah-saleh-resigns?INTCMP=SRCH
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45418855?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter#.Ts3cA3PWzeh
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-15861103
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203764804577057921295546322.html?KEYWORDS=Yemen
http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/story/2011-11-24/yemen-unrest/51385070/1
http://www.amnesty.org.uk/news_details.asp?
NewsID=19825&utm_source=social&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=&utm_content=
http://britisharabguy.blogspot.com/2011/11/what-does-gcc-initiative-mean-for.html


Saturday, November 19, 2011

No to the GCC Deal


The GCC deal was first offered to Yemen's president Saleh, in April as a plan for a peaceful transfer of power and was endorsed by the US and EU. For the past 10 months we have been living with the GCC initiative 'saga'. I and many Yemenis were against such a deal because it only benefits Saleh, his regime, and some of the opposition, but not the youth who were the backbone of the revolution. I blogged in Arabic stating my opinion regarding this matter, back in April.

"The GCC plan called for President Saleh to hand over power to a deputy and resign within 30 days of signing the initiative. It would establish a unity government that would include opposition members. A presidential election would take place two months after Mr. Saleh leaves office." (VOA)


The GCC deal offered Saleh, his family and his regime immunity. Yet instead of just signing it, Saleh kept laying his terms and conditions and it was changed at least three times to fit his demands. Nevertheless, Saleh always managed to come up with an excuse not to sign it, and it doesn't seem like he ever will. The GCC, US, EU, UN and the world were so patient with Saleh which gave him time to violently try to quell the protests and allowed him to kill and injure many in the process.
We have all become weary of statements and headlines: "Yemen's Saleh vows to step down as President", "Yemen's Saleh refuses to sign GCC deal" and "Yemen's president agrees to sign GCC deal".


According to this video, five years ago in 2006, Saleh had said he is ready to step down. It is already 2011, people have been relentlessly and resiliently marching in the streets for the past 10 months demanding him to do exactly that, yet he is still holding on!




Ironically in a France24 interview Saleh said that "anyone that hangs to power is a madman" and just yesterday, Saturday 19th of Nov. he declared "he would hand the country over to the military if he were to step down as demanded by the opposition".
It is a promise rather than a threat, that power will remain in his household. His son, Ahmed is the head of the Republican Guard that has been behind the brutal attacks on the city of Taiz for the past months.


Yemenis in millions across Yemen have marched on the streets rejecting the GCC deal and chanted
"We want the world to pass a resolution which defends the blood of the revolutionaries". They demanded "there will be no immunity... Saleh and his cronies must face trial"
The GCC deal has only stalled the revolution and cost Yemen an economic and humanitarian crisis which keeps deteriorating by the day. Yemenis are suffering from shortages in electricity, cooking gas, fuel and water. More than 800  protesters have been killed since January and around 2500 have been wounded. According to government sources, 1480 have been killed. In short, the "bloody" GCC deal simply bought Saleh time on the expense of the Yemeni people. It didn't call for reconstructing the army, removing Saleh's family from power nor removing the corrupt regime. It only allows their survival and is therefore REJECTED!


We demand a swift and firm UN resolution that stops the bloodshed in Yemen by freezing Saleh's assets and referring him to the International Criminal Court.


We are starting an online campaign to express our rejection and say #No2GCCdeal.
Support us by using the hashtag on twitter, like our FB page and read the storify


Related link:
http://globalvoicesonline.org/2011/11/22/yemen-will-saleh-sign-the-gcc-deal-youth-oppose/