SANAA, Yemen —
Yemen's president has fired his entire Cabinet amid escalating
protests demanding his ouster.
President Ali Abdullah Saleh is facing a monthlong popular
uprising against him that has turned increasingly bloody in the
past few days as security troops opened fire on demonstrators in
the capital and in the country's south. Around 100 people have
been killed so far in the unrest.
The president's office issued a statement Sunday saying he
was firing his Cabinet. The announcement came after members of
Saleh's own tribe called on him to step down, robbing the
U.S.-backed leader of vital support.
Tens of thousands of people joined a funeral procession
Sunday for protesters killed by government gunmen, robbing the
embattled U.S.-backed leader of vital support.
Yemen's ambassador to the United Nations and its human rights
minister resigned to protest the crackdown, further undermining
President Ali Abdullah Saleh. Experts said the president's
dwindling influence was likely to either accelerate his
departure or force him to resort to greater violence to retain
power.
Saleh appeared to shy away from more force for the moment,
disbanding police and special forces around Sanaa University,
which has been the center of the deadly crackdown, and replacing
them with a largely unarmed force.
"From now on, we will be controlling the entrances and exits
of the square by orders from the supreme military command," said
Lt. Col. Mohammed Hussein.
Friday was the bloodiest day of the monthlong uprising
against Saleh, and government snipers killed more than 40
protesters. The violence drew condemnation from the U.N. and the
United States, which backs his government with hundreds of
millions of dollars in military aid to battle a potent al-Qaida
offshoot based in Yemen's mountainous hinterlands.
Some of the country's most important religious leaders joined
in the call for Saleh's resignation.
"This is definitely in my view now entering into some form of
an end game," said Salman Shaikh, director of the Brookings Doha
Center.
Yemen's most powerful tribe, its opposition parties and
masses of young protesters have now united in calls for Saleh's
departure, Shaikh said, calling that a dire sign for the
president's ability to retain power.
"The disparate elements of what can be called the opposition
have now coalesced around the demand for him to step down,"
Shaikh said. "This is now a very powerful, irresistible
coalition."
Mohammad al-Sabri, an opposition spokesman, told The
Associated Press that the opposition will under no circumstances
agree to a dialogue with Saleh after the crimes his regime has
committed.
"The president must understand that the only way to avoid
more bloodshed and strife in this country is for him to leave.
Nobody will have any regrets about him," he said.
People living in apartment buildings around the square tossed
down flowers at Sunday's funeral procession. Electricity was cut
off for about three hours in Yemen's major cities, and activists
accused the government of trying to block people from seeing
television coverage of the march. Cell service was also
interrupted.
Massive crowds flooded into the Sanaa University square and
solidarity demonstrations were held across the country in
regions including Aden, Hadramawt, Ibb, Al-Hudaydah, Dhamar and
Taiz.
"We hail with all respect and observance, the position of the
people at the (Sanaa University) square," Sheik Sadiq al-Ahmar,
head of Saleh's Hashed tribe, said in a joint statement with the
religious leaders issued after a meeting at his home late
Saturday.
Opposition parties taking part in the procession said they
had have changed their position from demands for political
reforms to calls for Saleh's removal.
"Our only choice now is the removal of the regime soon. We
stand by the people's demand," opposition leader Yassin Said
Numan told The Associated Press.
Human Rights Minister Huda al-Ban said she was stepping down
to protest the government's "horrible, coward and perfidious
crime." And a Foreign Ministry official told The Associated
Press that UN Ambassador Abdullah Alsaidi had sent in his letter
of resignation.
Health Minister Abdul-Karim Rafi told reporters the killing
of protesters was "a crime unacceptable by logic or could be
justified."
He said 44 protesters were killed and 192 wounded, 21
critically.
Prosecutor-General Abdullah al-Ulty said that 693 protesters
were hurt and some bodies have not yet been identified.
Mohammed Naji Allaw, a lawyer and activist, said the
government offering money to victims' families to not cooperate
with the investigation, and was pressuring them not to
participate in the funeral procession.
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.