Friday protests grip Middle East

25/02/2011| IslamWeb

Tens of thousands of supporters and opponents of Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh have held rival rallies in the capital, Sanaa.

Protesters outside Sanaa University repeated slogans demanding that the country's longtime president step down, chanting: "The people demand the downfall of the regime."
About 4 km away loyalists shouted support for the president, who they described as holding the fractured and impoverished tribal country together.
Al Jazeera's Hashem Ahelbarra, reporting from Sanaa on Friday, said the situation is calm there due to the huge presence of police and military deployed to prevent any clashes between government supporters and pro-democracy protesters.
"However, the situation in Aden [in the south] is very tense, we know that at least 15 pro-democracy protesters were injured in clashes with security forces [today]," he said.
"Security forces have been asked by the ministry of the interior to block the main square to put an end to the escalations there, as it is the stronghold of the secessionist movement who want to break away from the north.
Yemen has been swept up in protests inspired by the recent successful uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia. The demonstrators are demanding that Saleh, in power for 32 years, step down.
'Anarchy and killing'
Seventeen people have died in the past nine days in a sustained wave of nationwide anti-Saleh protests. The embattled president has said he will not give in to "anarchy and killing".
Saleh is struggling to end month-old protests flaring across his impoverished country.
He is also trying to maintain a shaky truce with northern Shia Muslim fighters and contain a secessionist uprising in the south against northern rule.
Salah has offered to step down before elections scheduled for 2013 and state news agency Saba said he has assigned a committee headed by Ali Mohammed Megawar, the prime minister, to open a dialogue with protesters to hear their demands.
Elsewhere in the Middle East, Egypt's new military rulers, promising to guard against "counter-revolution", faced political pressure on Friday to purge the cabinet of ministers appointed by Hosni Mubarak, the deposed president, as thousands of protesters gathered in Cairo.
On the eve of the rally that will also celebrate two weeks since Mubarak's removal, the military, which has promised elections within six months, assured Egyptians there would be "no return to the past" of the Mubarak era.
At a gathering at Tahrir Square, which was also to remind the military of the people power that ended Mubarak's 30-year rule, activists urged the military to overhaul the newly appointed cabinet and install a fresh team of technocrats.
Protesters want Mubarak to be put on trial and for Prime Minister Ahmed Shafik to be fired.
"Friday is another day of protest to bring together Egyptians who bravely ousted Mubarak but still struggle as remnants of the old regime try to hang on and ruin the revolution," Sameha Metwali, an activist, said.
'Day of Anger'
On Friday, several thousand people demonstrated in the centre of the Jordanian capital, Amman, in a "Day of Anger" to call for political reforms.
Jordan deployed more than 3,000 security personnel across central Amman, but police reportedly stayed on the sidelines and even gave bottles of water and juice to the protesters.
"We are demonstrating today against the official bullying and to demand reforms," leading trade unionist Maisara Malas told AFP news agency.
"We seek regime reforms. We want a true parliamentary monarchy. The monarchy should not dominate parliament."
Hamzah Mansur, chief of the Islamic Action Front, the political arm of the Muslim Brotherhood in Jordan, told the crowds "reforms have become a necessity that cannot be delayed."
"We want immediate constitutional change to help create productive governments and a truly representative parliament. These are the demands of all Jordanians."
Meanwhile, more than 100 supporters of the Hashemite royal family gathered outside Al-Husseini Mosque, in the capital.
In Bahrain, Shia protesters thronged the capital, Manama, to demand the end of the ruling government.
Beyond the Middle East, in North Africa, Tunisians gathered for fresh protests to demand the resignation of Prime Minister Mohamed Ghannouchi's transitional government set up after last month's ouster of Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.
Demonstrators chanted "Ghannouchi leave" and "Shame on this government" as army helicopters circled above the crowd massed in the Kasbah government quarter, where police estimated that the number of people topped 100,000.
Ghannouchi's caretaker government, tasked with leading Tunisia to elections due in about five months, has faced regular protests demanding it expel remnants of the old government.
PHOTO CAPTION
A Libyan protester protests against Libyan Leader Moammar Gadhafi, in Tobruk, Libya, on Wednesday, Feb. 23, 2011.
Al-Jazeera

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