Yemen opposition: Saleh could sign GCC deal Tuesday or Wednesday

President Ali Abdullah Saleh is due to sign GCC-brokered deal any day, Gulf News has learned

Last updated:
1 MIN READ
1.935149-2511828421
AFP
AFP

Sana'a: Yemen's beleaguered president Ali Abdullah Saleh is due to sign the slightly modified version  of the GCC-brokered, a  senior figure in the opposition told Gulf News  Tuesday.

"Saleh could sign the deal within the next hours or  tomorrow. But we cannot say for sure that we would sign because he has changed his mind many times in the minutes," the source said.  

Transfer of powers to deputy

Under the deal, Saleh will transfer all of his powers to his deputy and he will remain a figurehead till a new president is elected after 90 days from Saleh's ratification of the deal.

"The opposition was reluctant to accept him to stay in power even without power, because it was against the wishes of the camping protesters," the source said.

Protesters have decried the deal many times and threatened  to  regard the opposition as part of the regime that seek to remove. 

A handout picture released by the Yemeni presidency office reportedly shows Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh (centre) touring a military site in Sana'a on November 19, 2011. A United Nations Security Council meeting on Yemen scheduled for November 21 has been postponed for a week, the world body's senior envoy to the Arabian Peninsula country told AFP.
Yemenis protest against the rule of Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh following the weekly Friday noon prayers in Aden on November 18, 2011. An opposition MP urged the UN Security Council, which is to meet on Yemen, to refer President Ali Abdullah Saleh to the International Criminal Court over bloodshed linked to his refusal to quit.
A Yemeni anti-regime protester makes victory signs during a demonstration in Sana on November 21, 2011. A top Yemeni army officer was killed in battle between elite troops and dissident tribesmen who took over a strategic military base north of Sanaa, the defence ministry and tribal sources said.

Sign up for the Daily Briefing

Get the latest news and updates straight to your inbox