Yemen rivals fail to sign power transfer deal
SANAA — Yemen's political rivals failed Wednesday to sign a Gulf-brokered plan under which veteran President Ali Abdullah Saleh would leave office as demanded in almost four months of popular protests.Abdullatif…
SANAA — Yemen's political rivals failed Wednesday to sign a Gulf-brokered plan under which veteran President Ali Abdullah Saleh would leave office as demanded in almost four months of popular protests.Abdullatif al-Zayani, the head of the Gulf Cooperation Council mediating the crisis, flew out of Sanaa as sources close to the negotiations between the regime and opposition said the two sides again failed to ink the power transfer accord.The accord would see Saleh quit office within 30 days, in return for immunity from prosecution, before a government of national unity is formed and elections for a new president held after two months.Washington issued a fresh plea Wednesday for the deal to be signed when Yemen's opposition expressed doubts about it after an aide to Saleh, who has ruled the country since 1978, said the signing would happen on Wednesday.US President Barack Obama's aide John Brennan called Saleh to urge him to sign and implement the agreement "so that Yemen is able to move forward immediately with its political transition," a White House statement said.An aide to the embattled Yemeni president said the nation's political rivals had agreed to sign the plan brokered by the region's six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council on Wednesday.But parliamentary opposition spokesman Mohammed Qahtan said Saleh had backed out of signing the accord."We came to an agreement late Tuesday but this morning they changed their minds," Qahtan told AFP, adding Saleh and his partisans "refuse" to sign it this way.According to the US statement, Brennan "noted that this transfer of power represents the best path forward for Yemen to become a more secure, unified, and prosperous nation and for the Yemeni people to realize their aspirations for peace and political reform."He also "affirmed the commitment of the United States to stand with the Yemeni government and people as they implement this historic agreement, foster economic development, and combat the security threat from Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula."Brennan "reite
last modification 2011-05-18 20:45:46
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