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Yemen’s Saleh due to sign transition deal

Sanaa — Yemen's president was to sign an agreement on Saturday to quit power in a month's time in exchange for immunity in a deal that, if implemented, would make him the third Arab ruler ousted by a wave of popular uprisings.

Ali Abdullah Saleh, who has ruled the impoverished Arabian Peninsula state for nearly 33 years, has in principle accepted the agreement negotiated by his oil-exporting neighbors in the six-state Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC).
 
Yemen's main opposition coalition, which includes both Islamists and leftists, has also agreed to the deal, even as street protesters have rejected the agreement and demand Saleh step down immediately and face prosecution.
 
Saleh, a shrewd political operator long considered a US ally against Al-Qaeda's Yemen-based wing, has forced mediators to split the signing ceremonies over two days and has objected to the presence of Qatari officials.
 
Qatar's prime minister was first to state publicly the Gulf deal would seek Saleh's resignation, and its satellite TV channel Al-Jazeera has been blamed by Saleh for inciting revolt in the Arab World, swept by pro-democracy protests.
 
While the Yemeni leader signs the pact in Sanaa, his party's vice president will travel to the Saudi capital Riyadh for Sunday's official signing ceremony by the opposition, which has warned that further bloodshed could derail the deal.
 
The Secretary-General of the GCC, Abdullatif al-Zayani, arrived in Sanaa to deliver the initiative to Saleh for him to ratify later in the day, a government official said.
 
Zayani also carried invitations to all sides to attend Sunday's official signing ceremony in Riyadh, the official said.
 
VIOLENCE IN SOUTH YEMEN
 
Violence broke out in south Yemen ahead of the signing when gunmen killed two police officers and wounded two more in the port city of Aden, state media said. Witnesses said the gunmen had tried to attack a police station and a gunbattle followed. Gunfire also erupted outside a nearby prison.
 
Shortly afterward, security forces moved in to break up an anti-government protest in the same neighborhood, killing one protester and wounding 50 more, said Qassim Jamil, a doctor.
 
Protesters fled the scene, and tanks and armored vehicles were patrolling the streets, the witnesses said. The wounded were being taken to nearby hotels for treatment because they could not reach hospitals, Jamil said.
 
Analysts say the government, which has been trying to contain separatists in the south and Shia rebels in the north, fears secessionists may be trying to take advantage of Yemen's leadership crisis to renew a push for separation.
 
Protesters say they will stay on the streets until Saleh leaves. They also called for him to be put on trial for corruption and the deaths of the estimated 143 protesters killed since protest rallies began three months ago.
 
The GCC deal offers Saleh and his entourage, including relatives who run branches of the security forces, immunity from prosecution.
 
"The people want the trial of the murderer," some anti-Saleh demonstrators shouted at a protest on Friday that ended in a funeral march for 12 protesters killed on Wednesday, thousands passing their wooden coffins from hand to hand to their graves.
 
Analysts say the 30-day window for Saleh to resign gives plenty of time for disgruntled forces from the old guard to stir trouble in Yemen, where half the population owns a gun and Al-Qaeda has gained a foothold in its mountainous regions.
 
The United States and neighboring oil giant Saudi Arabia want the Yemen standoff resolved to avert chaos that could enable Al-Qaeda's Yemen wing to operate more freely.
 
Should the deal go through, Saleh would appoint a prime minister from the opposition to head a transitional government, which would set a presidential election for 60 days after he resigns.
 
Many protesters, distrustful of the opposition coalition due to its presence in the government in past years, called for them to back out of the deal.
 
"They wouldn't lose anything because Saleh isn't going to stick to the agreement. If he can't find a reason to overturn it he'll spark a war," Sanaa protester Abdulsalam Mahmoud said.

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