Yemen
The news from Yemen is grimly familiar – more protestors shot by President Saleh's security forces and plainclothes thugs. But now the US government has shifted position, letting it be known in various ways that it's time for Saleh to ...
Yemeni forces fired on demonstrators in three major cities Thursday, killing at least 18 people and wounding hundreds more. In the capital, Sanaa, republic.
Meanwhile, In Yemen. The violence there has not abated one bit: Yemeni forces have opened fire on demonstrators in three major cities, killing at least 18 and wounding hundreds in one of the fiercest bouts of violence witnessed in ...
The Yemen Youth Declaration, On behalf of the youths of the Yemeni revolution. We are, the Yemeni youths, writing this declaration to explain the situation in Yemen from the sight of the Yemeni youths and clarify our aims and requests. ...
SANAA, Yemen (AP) -- Yemen's embattled president on Sunday resisted intense U.S. and Arab pressure and stalled at signing a deal calling for him to step down in 30 days, as his regime brought armed supporters into the streets demanding ...
Five people are believed to have died in fresh anti-government protests in Yemen as youth groups call on Gulf Arab states to withdraw a plan that has failed so far to remove the country's president from power. ...
Protests that began in January to unseat longtime president President Ali Abdullah Saleh were expected to continue Friday as Saleh remained resistant to a deal brokered by gulf leaders that would allow him to step down with immunity.
... ignited in Tunisia striking most strongly in Egypt, Libya, Yemen and Syria. The autocratic monarchies have not been immune ... since the group has shown no interest in bringing in Yemen and Iraq, countries much closer to home. "There are many ...
Amnesty International has called on Yemeni authorities to stop using unnecessary deadly force against anti-government protesters. The action came after security forces opened fire on demonstrations Thursday in the capital, Sana, ...
Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh is reportedly set to sign an agreement that would bring his 33-year rule to an end, making him yet another victim of the “Arab Spring” that began in Tunisia last December and raising questions about ...
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