Gulf plan for change of Yemen leader

A Gulf Arab plan for Yemen's president to step down will guarantee the veteran leader and his family immunity from prosecution…

A Gulf Arab plan for Yemen's president to step down will guarantee the veteran leader and his family immunity from prosecution, an opposition source said today, and youth activists said that was enough to reject it.

The United States and Gulf Arab countries including Yemen's key financial backer, Saudi Arabia, now appear ready to push aside a long-time ally against al-Qaeda's Yemen-based wing to avoid a chaotic collapse of the poorest Arab state.

President Ali Abdullah Saleh's sometimes violent response to two months of protests against his 32-year rule has tried the patience of Washington and Riyadh, both of which have been the target of attempted attacks by al-Qaeda's Yemeni branch.

The Gulf proposal for talks in Riyadh was presented to Mr Saleh and a coalition of opposition parties this week. Mr Saleh welcomed it, and Gulf sources said it envisaged handing power to an interim council of tribal and political leaders who would help appoint a national unity government ahead of elections.

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But an opposition source said the proposal would give Mr Saleh and his family, whose control over key posts has long angered many Yemenis, immunity from prosecution and youth activists said in a statement that was not acceptable.

"We affirm that this is a people's revolution demanding the fall and the trial of a regime ... to build a new civilian state according to the will of the people, not international parties or political parties that do not represent us," said a statement in the name of a coalition of protester groups in Sanaa.

Talks in recent weeks, which included the US ambassador in Sanaa, became bogged down over Mr Saleh's demand for assurances that he and members of his family would not face prosecution.

Mr Saleh has been trying for several weeks to involve Saudi Arabia, his most important foreign backer, sending his foreign minister to Riyadh two weeks ago.

The Gulf proposal envisages Mr Saleh hand over power to a vice-president, the opposition source said. Current incumbent Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi has said he does not want such a role, which suggests Mr Saleh would appoint a new figure.

"They informed the opposition that their vision is based on Saleh leaving power after handing authority to his deputy and then forming a national unity government that will prepare a new constitution ... and parliament elections," he said.

"The Gulf vision is also based on Saleh's proposal that both he and General Ali Mohsen ... leave Yemen, and the Gulf countries have committed to guarantees that Saleh and his family will not face prosecution after they leave," the source added.

Gen Mohsen was one of a string of generals, diplomats and tribal leaders who turned against Mr Saleh after snipers killed 52 protesters on March 18th.

Though Gen Mohsen's army wing is protecting protesters camped out in Sanaa, he is widely mistrusted as a kinsman of Mr Saleh who was for years a loyal pillar of his rule.

This week, Washington began to shift its policy of public support for Mr Saleh, who has rallied large numbers of supporters and insists he should stay until elections late this year. Mr Saleh told supporters he would defend Yemen with "blood and soul".

Even before the pro-democracy protests inspired by uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia, Mr Saleh was struggling to quell a separatist rebellion in the south and a Shia insurgency in the north.

Frustration with Mr Saleh's intransigence may push Yemenis, many of them heavily armed and with experience of wars and insurgencies, closer to a violent power struggle that could give al-Qaeda's regional wing more room to operate.

All of these factors spark concern for stability in a country that sits on a shipping lane through which more than three million barrels of oil pass each day.

In the latest unrest, police shot and wounded two people during a demonstration against domestic gas shortages in the capital Sanaa late yesterday, witnesses said.

Reuters