The clashes pitted Central Security forces commanded by Saleh’s nephew, Col. Yehia Saleh, against troops from the First Armored Division, headed by Gen. Ali Mohsen Al-Ahmar, who defected and joined the protesters in March. The crackle of automatic weapons and the heavy thud of mortars echoed across the city.
One soldier from each side was killed before the fighting stopped around dawn, a security official said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to brief the media.
The two units have clashed in the past, but Friday’s fighting was the first showdown since Saleh signed a US-backed proposal Wednesday in the Saudi capital Riyadh. Under the agreement, Saleh agreed to pass power to Vice President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi in 30 days, after a new government sworn in by the vice president passes a law protecting Saleh and his associates from prosecution.
Hadi is also to call for early presidential elections to be held within 90 days.
If the deal holds, Saleh would be the fourth dictator pushed from power this year by the Arab Spring uprisings. But the agreement does not guarantee far-reaching political changes like those brought about by the uprisings in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya.
It does not ban Saleh from returning to Yemen, so he won’t be exiled like ousted Tunisian strongman Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. And it protects Saleh from prosecution, so he won’t be put on trial like Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak.
Amnesty International criticized the immunity clause, saying it “deals a serious blow to victims of human rights violations.”
“Immunity leads to impunity. It denies justice and deprives victims of the truth and full reparations,” the London-based group said in a statement Thursday.
Many of the protesters who have braved months of lethal government crackdowns to demonstrate for democratic reforms have rejected the deal. On Friday, hundreds of thousands of protesters took to the streets in cities across the country to denounce the agreement and call for Saleh to be put on trial for crimes ranging from corruption to lethal crackdowns on protests.
In Sanaa, mourners carried aloft the coffins of five protesters killed Thursday through the capital’s main protest camp.
Fuad Al-Hameeri, an imam, captured the spirit of the crowd, warning Saleh in an address to the protesters that “the blood of the martyrs that pushed you from power is the same that will put you in prison and push you into court.”
Fierce clashes in Yemen leave 2 dead despite deal
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Fri, 2011-11-25 21:59
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