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Sunday, June 5, 2011

Yemen president flies to Saudi for treatment (Reuters)

SANAA/RIYADH (Reuters) – President Ali Abdullah Saleh, wounded in an attack on his presidential palace, has flown to Saudi Arabia for medical treatment, potentially offering a face-saving end to his three decade rule.

But uncertainty about whether his sons and nephews would try to maintain a grip on power following months of protests against Saleh's rule meant the risk of further turmoil remained.

Acting President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi was slated to meet members of the military and Saleh's sons, Al Arabiya television said on Sunday, citing sources. It was the first indication Saleh's powerful sons had not left the country.

Saudi sources said Riyadh had brokered a ceasefire between rival clans and political elites.

But on Sunday, heavy gunfire and explosions rang out in the capital Sanaa. Witnesses said the gunfire was heard in the Hasaba district, a focal point of fighting in recent weeks between Saleh's forces and members of the powerful Hashed tribe led by Sadeq al-Ahmar.

The streets of Sanaa had been mostly quiet earlier on Sunday except for a few small gatherings celebrating Saleh's departure.

"Our happiness will be complete once we're sure that Saleh won't come back," a resident at a local cafe said."

In the southern city of Taiz, thousands of people celebrated Saleh's trip to Saudi Arabia with a fireworks display.

The Saudi royal court said Saleh had arrived to be treated for wounds suffered in Friday's rocket attack on his presidential palace -- an assault that marked a major escalation in a conflict building toward full civil war.

Rumors of Saleh's departure had circulated in Sanaa for hours before his arrival in Riyadh was confirmed, and Yemeni officials repeatedly denied he had any plans to leave.

"These are the most difficult days and we're worried the coming days will be even more difficult," Sanaa resident Ali al Mujahid, 42, said. "We want them to solve their conflicts and leave us to live in peace."

Saleh, whose Saudi medical evacuation plane was met by a senior Saudi official, walked off the aircraft but had visible injuries on his neck, head and face, a source told Reuters.

Saudi Arabia, itself concerned about militant groups operating on Yemeni territory, has been to the fore in efforts by Gulf states to negotiate Saleh's resignation and peaceful handover of power to fractious opposition groups. He has several times backed away from agreements at the last moment.

The world's top oil exporter shares a 1,500-km (950-mile) border with Yemen, and until recently with the United States had backed Saleh as an ally against a Yemen-based arm of al Qaeda.

"I think this is just about the end of his match," Khalid al-Dakhil, a Saudi political analyst, said. "The Saudis are not going to bargain with him."

DIFFICULT DAYS

Leaving Yemen at a time of such instability, even for medical care, could make it hard for Saleh to retain power. Saleh's vice-president, largely a figurehead, took over as acting president and head of the armed forces in Yemen.

U.S. President Barack Obama's top counter-terrorism aide spoke on Saturday with the Yemeni vice-president, the White House said, without offering details of the talks. Washington has been calling for Saleh to leave.

The true seat of power, following Saleh's departure, has yet to be decided. But Saleh's eldest son, Ahmed, commands the elite Republican Guard and three of his nephews control the country's security and intelligence units.

Saleh was transferred to a military hospital after landing at King Khalid Air Base, a Saudi source said.

He will have tests before surgery to remove shrapnel from his body, the source said, adding Saleh was also expected to have plastic surgery to mend wounds on his face and neck.

The rocket attack, which killed seven people, devastated the government. The prime minister, two deputy prime ministers and the speakers of both parliamentary chambers are being treated in Riyadh for injuries.

The latest violence, which pitted Saleh loyalist forces against members of the Ahmar's Hashed tribe, was the bloodiest since pro-democracy unrest erupted in January and was sparked by Saleh's refusal to sign a power transfer deal.

A Saudi official said Saudi Arabia had brokered a fresh truce between the Hashed tribe and forces loyal to Saleh, and a tribal leader said his followers were abiding by it.

A truce agreed a week ago held for only a day before fresh street battles broke out in the capital Sanaa, leading to the most intense fighting there in the four-month-old uprising against Saleh's rule.

Abdulla Ali al-Radhi, Yemen's ambassador to Britain, said of Friday's attack on the palace: "The rocket was devastating. It was a clear assassination attempt against the president."

AL QAEDA

Worries are mounting that Yemen, already on the brink of financial ruin and home to al Qaeda militants, could become a failed state that poses a threat to the world's top oil exporting region and to global security.

Saleh's forces retaliated over the attack by shelling the homes of the leaders of the Hashed tribal federation, which has been engaged in street fights with his forces. Spokesmen for the group denied responsibility for the palace attack and said 10 tribesmen were killed and dozens injured by the shelling.

A growing number of people in Saleh's inner circle feel the attack may have been carried out by General Ali Mohsen who has broken from Saleh, sided with anti-government protesters and called the president a "madman who is thirsty for more bloodshed."

An expert on Yemen with close ties to Sanaa's leadership said: "Nobody could have done this with such military precision other than a military man."

Saleh has exasperated his former U.S. and Saudi allies, who once saw him as a key partner in efforts to combat Yemen-based al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), by repeatedly reneging on a deal brokered by the Gulf Cooperation Council for him to quit in return for immunity from prosecution.

(Additional reporting by Mohammed al-Ramahi in Sanaa, Mohammed Mukhashaf in Aden, Khaled al-Mahdi in Taiz, Mahmoud Habboush in Dubai, Samia Nakhoul in London, Erik Kirschbaum in Berlin and the Madrid bureau; writing by Ralph Boulton; editing by Myra MacDonald)


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