Yemeni troops open fire on thousands

Two protesters killed in attack on rally calling for boycott of presidential election

Last updated:
Reuters
Reuters
Reuters

Aden: Yemeni troops killed two protesters when they opened fire on a rally yesterday in the southern province of Dalea calling for a boycott of an election to replace outgoing President Ali Abdullah Saleh, activists said.

Separatists seeking to revive a southern socialist state that Saleh united with the north in 1990 have been demonstrating against the vote, scheduled for February 21, and northern Shiite rebels have said they will also not take part.

"The army forces located at military positions overlooking the town opened fire on thousands of people protesting against the upcoming presidential elections," a leader of the southern separatist movement told Reuters.

"One demonstrator died immediately and another 12 were injured, while another man who was standing on the balcony of a hotel adjacent to the electoral committee's office was killed by a stray bullet."

The election is part of a plan hammered out by Yemen's Gulf neighbours to end a year of political upheaval in the impoverished Arabian Peninsula state.

Weakened by months of protests against Saleh's rule, the Yemeni government has lost control of whole chunks of the country, giving Shiite rebels known as Al Houthis free rein in the north, along the border with Saudi Arabia.

Attack

In the south, militants have seized control of several towns. Unidentified gunmen attacked the electoral committee's office in Dalea last month.

Some southerners, who say northerners have seized their resources and discriminate against them, have been burning their voting cards in protest at the election, in which Yemen's acting leader Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi is the sole candidate.

Saleh is in the United States receiving medical treatment for wounds sustained during an assassination attempt on him last year, but has said he will return home for the vote, casting doubt on his commitment to leave office.

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