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http://ca.news.yahoo.com/yemen-president-says-leave-power-coming-days-135252595.\

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Yemen's Saleh says will step down in coming days

By Mohammed Ghobari and | Reuters – 2 hours 9 minutes ago

SANAA (Reuters) - Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh said Saturday he would

step down in " the coming days " after months of protests against his 33-year rule

that risked tipping the dirt-poor country into civil war, but the government

said his exit was not imminent.

" I reject power and I will continue to reject it, and I will be leaving power in

the coming days, " Saleh said in a speech on state television.

Opponents were skeptical of the wily political survivor who has backed out of a

Gulf-brokered power transition plan three times this year.

They argue the speech is a maneuver to ease pressure ahead of a briefing to the

U.N. Security Council by U.N. Yemen envoy Jamal Benomar, who left Sanaa

empty-handed after days of shuttle diplomacy between the opposition and the

ruling party.

Saleh's comments were as vague as others he has made about stepping down and

were seen by Yemenis as yet another ruse by a leader who has spent the " Arab

Spring " -- pro-democracy uprisings across the region -- saying he is about to

quit.

Protests against Saleh's rule paralyzed Yemen, weakening government control over

swathes of the country and fanning fears al Qaeda's regional wing may use the

upheaval to expand its foothold near oil-shipping routes through the Red Sea.

Diplomats have said they are close to getting international consensus for

issuing a Security Council resolution which may add to pressures on the country

to finalize a power transfer.

" This is new propaganda from Saleh before Yemen is discussed at the Security

Council, " said Mohammed al-Sabri, a spokesman for the opposition's political

coalition. " Four months have passed since he said he accepted the Gulf

transition deal, so what is stopping him? He doesn't even need a few days to do

it. "

The veteran leader has been clinging to power while opposition and ruling party

representatives cast about for a formula to reach a deal, deadlocked in a debate

over whether Saleh should relinquish power before or after an early election.

" The president has always been clear that we are committed to either the GCC

initiative or the U.N.'s implementation mechanism that will move us to an early

election. He has been clear that he will leave power in that capacity, " Deputy

Information Minister Abdu al-Janadi told Reuters.

" He said this to show his commitment to this plan, but there is no plan for a

resignation or transfer of powers before we have agreed and signed a deal. That

would just plunge the country into chaos or even war.

" He is ready to leave power in days yes, but whether this happens in the coming

days or months will depend on the success of negotiations for a deal. "

SURPRISE RETURN

Saleh made a surprise return in September to Yemen after three months

convalescence in Saudi Arabia from a June assassination attempt. Many in the

capital, which has been wracked with violence in recent weeks, feared his return

might signal a move toward asserting power through military might.

" I call on my supporters to persevere and to confront any challenges, " Saleh

said, in his first television appearance with his head uncovered since the bomb

attack on his compound.

He also wore thick tan gloves, probably to cover skin grafts he had for severe

burns he suffered in the explosion.

Abdulghani al-Iryani, a Yemeni political analyst, said: " This is just Saleh's

latest line. I don't think it is really anything new. I remember he once before

said he would be ready to leave any day, so I don't think he means what he

said. "

Saleh has made many verbal concessions during the protests against him which

began in January, including promising to step down in return for immunity from

prosecution.

Frustration with Saleh's intransigence had pushed Yemenis, many of them heavily

armed and with experience of wars and insurgencies, closer to a violent power

struggle that could give al Qaeda's regional wing more room to operate.

All of these factors spark concern for stability in a country that sits on a

shipping lane through which more than three million barrels of oil pass each

day.

Saleh is a clever operator who has survived many tussles with rivals, and

skilfully used bribes and favors to keep tribal and political backers loyal.

But keeping his allies' loyalty has become more difficult as Yemen sinks into an

economic crisis.

More than 40 percent of Yemenis live on less than $2 a day while a third face

chronic hunger. Dwindling water and oil supplies are also a problem.

MILITARY STRUGGLE

Many opponents of Saleh said the biggest lie in the president's speech may be

found in the growing military escalation in Sanaa, now carved into areas

controlled by Saleh's forces and others by the pro-opposition troops of defected

general Ali Mohsen.

Mohsen dealt a major blow to Saleh by throwing his weight behind the protesters

in March. His troops clashed with forces lead by Saleh's son and nephew in

recent weeks, rocking the capital with days of heavy shelling. Some major

streets are still shut due to sporadic gunfights.

Analysts said Saleh's handover and early elections may be meaningless if the

capital and much of the country is still under de-facto military control by his

relatives.

" There was something about this speech that made me nervous, " said Yemeni

political analyst Ali Seif Hassan. " Unifying the army is the problem now...it's

clear he wants to run the elections while his son and relatives are still

running most of the military. "

In his speech, Saleh signaled that he was backing the vice president for future

leadership. In footage shown after the speech, it was Vice President Abd-Rabbu

Hadi Mansour, not Saleh, who greeted lawmakers gathered at the presidential

palace.

Mansour has long been seen as the ideal consensus candidate acceptable to the

opposition, though hardliners in the ruling party have shunned him.

" I want to praise the vice president for his leadership in my absence... He is

an experienced military man, " Saleh said.

Saleh's opponents said even if he stepped down, they feared the military

situation was beyond politicians' control.

" The seriousness of Saleh's speech will be tested by his agreement to form a

neutral committee to reorganize the military before early elections. But

elections will be meaningless if our army is divided, " said opposition leader

Mohammed al-Mutawakil.

REGIONAL RESONANCE

Saleh pledged cooperation with the United States after the September 11, 2001,

attacks on U.S. cities and received military and economic aid in return. But by

2004 al Qaeda appeared to be in disarray and U.S. interest waned.

In 2006 Washington cut aid to mark its anger at Yemen's perceived lenience

toward militants and U.S. counter-terrorism officials rank Yemen as a top

concern after Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Saudi Arabia is the Yemeni government's biggest financial donor and most

important ally, along with the United States, but some Yemenis resent the

influence of their wealthy neighbor.

The Saudis fear that al Qaeda's local wing, renamed al Qaeda in the Arabian

Peninsula (AQAP), is trying to relaunch armed attacks from Yemen to destabilize

the kingdom and possibly other allies in the Gulf.

Even before the wave of pro-democracy protests against his nearly 33-year rule,

Saleh was struggling to quell a separatist rebellion in the south and a Shi'ite

insurgency in the north.

(Additional reporting by Mohammed Mukhashaf and Dhuyazen Mukhashaf; Editing by

Louise Ireland)

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