Sana'a: At least 1,000 students marched through the streets of the Yemeni capital on Sunday urging Arabs to rise up against their leaders in the wake of Tunisian strongman Zine Al Abidine Bin Ali's ouster.
The students headed from Sanaa University's campus to the Tunisian embassy flanked by human rights activists.
They called for Arabs to wage a "revolution against their scared and deceitful leaders" and chanted: "Liberty's Tunisia, Sanaa salutes you a thousand times."
"Leave before you are toppled," read one banner, without naming Yemen's own President Ali Abdullah Saleh. "Peaceful and democratic change is our aim in building a new Yemen."
In power for the past 32 years, Saleh was re-elected in September 2006 to a seven-year mandate.
A draft amendment of the constitution, under discussion in parliament despite opposition protests, could further stretch the president's tenure by allowing a life-long mandate.
Becoming the first Arab leader to cave in to popular pressure and step down, Bin Ali, in power for 23 years, fled to Saudi Arabia on Friday after unprecedented popular protests in which dozens of people were killed.