Cách mạng Hoa Lài đã tới Yemen

Thảo luận trong 'Tin tức' bắt đầu bởi việtdươngnhân, Thg 3 22, 2011.

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    việtdươngnhân Bình Chánh

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    [​IMG]

    Các nhân viên ngoại giao của Yemen tại Hoa Kỳ, Nga, China, Saudi Arabia,
    Kuwait cùng với các Đại Sứ của Yemen tại Nhật Bản, Syria, Tiệp
    Khắc,Pakistan, Qatar, Oman, Spain đã từ chức và tuyên bố ủng hộ người
    dân nổi

    dậy. Trong khi đó ở trong nước thì có 3 vị tướng lãnh cao cấp và phát
    ngôn viên của quốc hội Yemen cũng tuyên bố từ chức và ủng hộ người dân.

    Một trong 3 vị tướng lãnh nói trên tuyên bố sẽ ra lệnh cho binh sĩ dưới quyền của mình bảo vệ người dân đi biểu tình.


    ***********************************
    Wave of top Yemen officials and generals quit after crackdown

    From Mohammed Jamjoom, CNN
    March 21, 2011 9:58 a.m. EDT



    [​IMG]
    Tens of thousands of Yemeni protesters demonstrated again on Sunday, March 20
    against the government in Sanaa.

    STORY HIGHLIGHTS
    - A government insider expects military clashes
    - At least 22 top officials resign in protest at the crackdown
    - A general orders his troops to protect the protesters
    President Saleh sacks his Cabinet after officials resign to protest the deaths of anti-government protesters
    (CNN)

    -- Three top generals in Yemen declared their support for

    anti-government protests Monday as a wave of officials, including the

    deputy speaker of parliament, announced their resignations.

    One

    of the generals who broke ranks will order his troops to protect

    protesters demonstrating against the country's longtime president, he

    told reporters in Yemen. Maj. Gen. Ali Mohsen Al-Ahmar's announcement

    ramps up the pressure on President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who is seeing

    cracks in his support after 32 years in power.

    At least 22 top officials announced their support for the "peaceful revolution" on Monday, the official said.
    They

    included a provincial governor, the ambassadors to Japan, Syria and the

    Czech Republic, and top diplomats in the embassies in Washington and

    Moscow.



    RELATED TOPICS
    · Yemen
    The

    ambassadors to Pakistan, Qatar, Oman, Spain and the consul general in

    Dubai announced their resignations together later on Monday. The envoys

    to China, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Algeria also quit, according to a

    government official who is not authorized to speak to the media and

    asked not to be named.

    But Saleh is not showing any signs of resigning, the source said.
    "I'm bracing myself for military clashes," the official said.
    Saleh

    dismissed his Cabinet on Sunday, after the weekend resignations of two

    top Yemeni officials to protest a government crackdown on protesters

    that left 52 people dead last week.

    Saleh

    asked the officials to stay on until a new Cabinet is appointed,

    according to Tareq Al-Shami, a spokesman for the country's ruling party.

    Yemen's embassy in the United States said there will be an investigation into the deaths of the protesters on Friday.
    "The

    perpetrators of this heinous act will be prosecuted to the full extent

    of the law," the embassy said, expressing "its condolences and heartfelt

    sorrow for the loss of innocent lives."

    Yemen's

    chief prosecutor has launched an investigation into the shootings in

    Sanaa on Friday and is questioning 17 suspects accused of orchestrating

    the massacre, the statement said.

    Human

    Rights Minister Huda al-Bann resigned over the crackdown, according to

    an official in her office who is not authorized to speak to the media

    and asked not to be named.

    Abdullah

    Al-Said, Yemen's ambassador to the United Nations, also quit in

    protest. Al-Said was replaced by Abdullallah Yahya Alsalal, according to

    Yemen's embassy in the United States.

    The resignations came amid new signs of cracks in support for Saleh.
    Senior

    ruling party member Mohammed Abulahoum said Sunday that Saleh "should

    seriously consider a good, safe exit strategy" to "prepare the

    foundation in Yemen for a good transfer of power from him to the next

    authority or president."

    Abulahoum

    "strongly" condemned Friday's violence, and in protest, has withdrawn a

    plan he proposed to mediate between the president and the opposition.

    Members

    of Saleh's own tribe are also calling for him to step down, according

    to Yemeni ruling party officials who have asked not to be named as they

    are not authorized to speak to the media.

    Tens

    of thousands of people protested Sunday outside Sanaa University in the

    capital, eyewitnesses said. CNN was not able to independently confirm

    the size of the protests.

    Funerals

    were held Sunday for some of the people killed in attacks Friday, with

    bodies of the victims carried through the streets.

    In

    addition to the fatalities, more than 100 people were hurt Friday in

    clashes between tens of thousands of anti-government protesters and

    security forces outside the university, medical officials on the scene

    said.

    Saleh announced that a state of emergency had been declared, and he expressed his "deep regret" over the casualties.
    Witnesses

    said the clashes began after government supporters and anti-government

    demonstrators threw rocks at each other. Security forces shot into the

    air and then into the crowd; they also fired tear gas to try to disperse

    the crowd, witnesses said.

    Yemen has been wracked by weeks of unrest, with thousands protesting Saleh's government.
    High

    unemployment has fueled much of the anger among a growing young

    population steeped in poverty. The protesters also cite government

    corruption and a lack of political freedom.


    The

    president has said he will not run for another term in the next round

    of elections. He also has pledged to bring a new constitution to a vote

    by the end of the year and transfer government power to an elected

    parliamentary system.

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