Mass protests in Yemen call on Saleh to quit

AFP , Friday 30 Sep 2011

Anti-government demonstrators in Yemen return to the streets after Friday prayers to demand embattled president's ouster

Yemen
Protestors gesture during a demonstration to demand the resignation of Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh in Sanaa, Yemen, Friday, (AP).

Tens of thousands of anti-government protesters called on Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh to quit in a mass protest following Friday prayers a day after the embattled leader said he would not step down.

Demonstrators marched along a main avenue in the capital chanting "victory for our Yemen and our Syria" in a show of support for Syrian pro-democracy activists calling for the ouster of President Bashar Al-Assad.

"Oh God, give victory to Syria and Yemen, Oh God... let Saleh and Bashar fall," they chanted as they emerged in their tens of thousands from Friday prayers.

In Syria, pro-democracy activists had called for protests on Friday under the slogan "Victory for Syria, victory for Yemen."

Also in Sanaa, thousands of pro-Saleh activists voiced their support for the president.

The rival protests came just a day after Saleh told Time and The Washington Post that he would not step down if his rivals were allowed to compete in future elections.

He was referring specifically to dissident General Ali Mohsen Al-Ahmar, who defected earlier this year in support of anti-government protesters, and powerful tribal chief Sheikh Sadiq Al-Ahmar.

"If we transfer power and they are there, this will mean that we have given in to a coup," Saleh said in his first interview since returning home a week ago from Saudi Arabia to recover from injuries sustained in a June attack on his palace.

Anti-government protesters in Yemen and Syria have for months been calling for their respective leaders to resign. Both governments have responded with deadly crackdowns.

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