Yemen ex-strongman Saleh has medical tests

AFP, Monday 21 May 2012

Yemen's ex-President Ali Abdullah Saleh has undergone 'routine' tests and 'minor operations', coming three months after he stepped down and handed power to his deputy in accordance with a Gulf-brokered power transfer deal

Yemen
Protesters shout slogans as they march during a demonstration demanding that relatives of former president Ali Abdullah Saleh be dismissed from senior army and police posts in Sanaa May 14, 2012. (Photo: Reuters)

Yemen's longtime strongman, who resigned in February in the face of a bloody year-long uprising against his rule, has undergone "routine" tests and "minor operations," his party announced on Monday.

Ali Abdullah Saleh "was admitted to a hospital run by the Republican Guard (elite troops under the command of his son Ahmed) for routine tests on Sunday, and has left the facility," General People's Congress deputy secretary general Sultan al-Barakani told AFP.

The GPC's website almotamar.net said Saleh "was admitted to hospital for routine tests and minor operations."

The veteran president, in power in Sanaa since 1978, stepped down in February, handing power to his deputy Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi in accordance with a hard-won transfer of power deal brokered by impoverished Yemen's wealthy Gulf Arab neighbours.

Saleh's critics accuse him of seeking to undermine the accord. Significant parts of the security forces remain under the command of his relatives.

During the uprising against his rule that began in January last year, Saleh was wounded in a bomb attack in the presidential palace in Sanaa in June.

He was hospitalised in Saudi Arabia and in January received medical treatment in the United States.

Saleh stepped down after being given a controversial promise of immunity from prosecution. He remains leader of the GPC and his supporters have not ruled out his standing in presidential elections set for 2014.

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