Sunday, April 24, 2011

Can I Put Scabies Treatment On 2 Days In A Row

The announcement of resignation Saleh does not calm the protesters Yemeni


Yemen President Ali Abdullah Saleh, agreed Saturday to relinquish power in a few weeks in exchange for immunity from the courts, but opponents of the regime will go ahead their protests until the head of state leaves office. Source world news
Opponents, who have taken to the streets in groups of tens of thousands to demand a change after 33 years with the same agent, fear that the notice of resignation is a move by itself and Saleh official parties to share power. The handover plan was drafted by the Gulf Cooperation Council and supported by the coalition known as the Joint Meeting Parties. Ibrahim al Baadani
an opposition activist in the city of Ibb, he was "surprised" when he learned that the formal opposition accepted the principle of immunity for Saleh: "We will continue peaceful protests until the president leaves."
'No dialogue' "We will not stop protesting and this will escalate. This initiative has nothing to do with us," said Mohammed Sultan, a protester in the capital Sana'a, where protesters are shouting: "No negotiation no dialogue. Saleh, surrender or flee! ". "Even one month before the president resign and we believe that will change your mind at any moment, "said Mohammed Sharafi activist." We're not leaving here until Saleh go and achieve our goals of establishing a modern federal state. "Tens
of protesters demanding the departure of the dictator killed during months of protests by young people inspired by the wave of uprisings in the Arab world. Yemen, with 23 million inhabitants, is one of the poorest countries in the region and the protesters accuse Saleh's corruption and mismanagement during his decades in power. He took the helm of North Yemen in 1978 and presided over the unification of the separate state South Yemen in 1990.


0 comments:

Post a Comment