26 - June 25th thru July 1st 2001,
Vol XI
Main Headlines:
•President Ali Abdulla Saleh: Yemeni-Saudi Relations an Example of Arab-Arab
Relations
•Meetings of Yemeni-Saudi Coordination Council concluded
•Alawi Al-Attas: Amendments of Elections Law
to be Discussed this week
•US State Department Urges its Citizens in Gulf
Region to Maintain High level of Vigilanc
•YSP Refuses all Forms of Terrorism &Violence
•National Committee of Youth, Set Up
•Fighting Renewed Between Tribes of Ahnoum
and Dhulaima in Amran Governorate
•Al-Mikhlafi: Ruling Party Totalitarian, Our Dialogue inside Organization
Normal
•Journalists Syndicate Condemns Shoura Weekly Suspension
•Confrontations Renewed Between Islamist Groups & Government
•University Employees Stage a Sit-In in front
of Council of Ministers Headquarters
•Medical Faculty Morgue Killer, Executed.
Here are excerpts from articles and editorials
published in some Yemeni local newspapers this week.
Sout Al- Shoura weekly organ of Union of Popular Forces party, 17
June 2001.
A front page article by the newspaper's political editor says it goes
without saying that the aspired for progress in our country is linked to
the existence of the state's decisive role. Such a role could not be found
without prevalence of a constitutional, institutional and decentralized
modern state.
Undoubtedly, success in completing the modern democratic state is dependent
upon realization of democracy and ensuring human rights. Therefore the
Union of Popular Forces works for consolidation of the principle of political
plurality, freedom of establishment of political parties and organizations.
The party affirms that the political system is based on two major factors,
i.e., the multi-party system and the peaceful transfer of power through
free and fair elections.
The political editor stresses in is article that the Union confirms
the necessity of commitment to democracy constants and its relevant concepts,
including the principle of equal opportunities for all citizens regarding
rights and duties. The party also stresses that all political and civilian
freedoms be guaranteed for them. The Union of Popular Forces party calls
for firm commitment to the democratic pursuit and preparation of constructive
climate for building the civilian constitutional state and insists on guarantees
for holding fair elections.
RAY weekly organ of Sons of Yemen League party, 19 June 2001
The weekly editorial says the Yemeni political arena is experiencing
certain developments showing indicators of awakening and return to the
circle of reason, the field of collective action under conviction that
the democratic experiment could not be so unless based on conception of
accepting others and keenness on their active presence.
The political parties sit to dialogue table under sponsorship of the
Yemeni Institute for Development of Democracy, the Yemeni Forum of Democracy.
The most prominent characteristic of the dialogue is plenary presence of
all elements of the Yemeni political spectrum; the ruling and opposition.
All of them meet under the motto of political reform, developing and activating
democratic practice. It is appreciable of the ruling party that it has
begun to embody an awareness acknowledging the importance of the other
party in the equation of democratic action, but it needs confirmation of
its seriousness and credibility.
Al-Wahdawi weekly organ of the Nasserite People's Unionist Organization,
19 June 2001
The weekly editorial is devoted to talk about the security premonition
of the Arab citizen in various parts of the Arab world. It says security
premonition would be always the issue of the Arab citizen for maybe a long
period. The Arab citizen is still squeezed in a narrow corner where he
is deprived of the simplest rights to secure and stable life.
In Palestine he is subject to annihilation, displacement and suffering,
no people have seen up till now, at the hands of gangsters possessing all
means of destruction and backed up by tyrants of the world. In Algeria
the Arab citizen is leading an ordeal supported by hidden colonialist forces
and other internal ones. In Yemen no day passes without witnessing incidents
of clashes and opening fire, in most cases the state is involved. Incidents
of kidnapping are repeated in a way very unusual in this country of faith
and wisdom. Freedom of press frequently come under attack, newspapers brought
to trial and are suspended if they continued their criticism.
The Arab citizen in the Arab peninsula is not secure while foreign
naval fleets desecrate his waters and land. In the case of Iraq he is besieged
for a long time and the colonialists every now and then invent new ways
for toughening the blockade on him. As Arabs we unfortunately do not object
being the instrument of implementing those sanctions imposed on the Iraqis.
The same situation is applied to the Arab citizen in the Sudan, or Egypt
or Libya, in the Arab Maghreb and Somalia. The editorial calls on all Arab
intellectuals to shoulder the task of enlightening the people on the dangers
of the situation.
ATTARIQ weekly, 19 June 2001.
The newspaper has devoted its editorial to the
second meeting of the Yemeni-Saudi Higher Coordination Council held this
week in Sanaa. It says the council's meeting and the issues on its agenda
represent a new addition in the continued meeting of the brethren at highest
levels and their joint endeavour to deepen the close Yemeni -Saudi relations
in the context of developing them into the level of partnership.
Since signing the Jedda border treaty the two countries'
relations have seen large-scale development generated great satisfaction
between on part of the two countries and peoples. It has deepened their
joint confidence. This represents a normal reflection due to the care rendered
to those relations by the two countries' leaderships of President Ali Abdulla
Saleh and King Fahd Bin Abdul Aziz.
Saut Al-Mua'radha (Voice of the Opposition) weekly, organ of Opposition
National Council 21 June 2001.
The newspaer's political editor has tackled in an article the question
of the U.S. State Department decision of closing the consulate section
in the American embassy in Sana'a lately. He says the U.S. State department
stand in this regard is to be considered as a political event regardless
of its size and various effects. Consequently it is an event that should
not be dissociated from its backgrounds, current motives and future dimensions.
Outwardly the US seems to have pulled back its interest in Yemen at all
levels especially after it has been shocked by strong stances and rejection
of its demands usually refused by all Yemenis.
Though the American attitude was rather expected to a certain extent,
the US gave it an element of surprise. That has produced contradictory
reactions by Yemeni officials and an apparent interest in the local and
foreign press. President Ali Abdulla Saleh has recently confirmed our country's
firm stand towards the Aqsa Intifada and refusal of any conspiracy attempts
on it, clarifying that
despite clarity and transparency of its stands, Yemen does not pay
attention to ways of extortion against those stands.
The American stand of closing its embassy's consulate section in Sana'a
cannot be dealt with in a casual manner. For since the war of 1994 summer
the United States began to possess some new cards in
Yemen and it had thought that holding those cards would guarantee for
it to obtain what it had aimed at and therefore it had practiced various
sorts of pressures t serve that end.
Ath-Thawri weekly organ of the Yemeni Socialist Party 21 June 2001.
Hashim Abdulaziz has written an article on the American new administration
policy in the Middle East. He says the U.S. Secretary of State Collin Powell
that the US follows in the Middle East a policy of ''hands off '' because
the new administration does not want to repeat mistakes of the former administration.
The Americans have lifted their hands from the actual basis for resolving
the Mideast crisis; resolutions of international legitimacy, resolutions
of Madrid conference for peace, and the principle of land for peace. The
American have taken hold of the peaceful settlement to create strategic
arrangements based on imposing peace on the region based the reality of
the Israeli occupation. In general the American hands are off regarding
any support to the Arabs that help them face their issues including living,
and development and confronting the various difficulties and challenges.
The American hands are always extended for Israel in economic, political,
military and diplomatic support. The US political activities backing Israel
have led to foil many international resolutions on condemning the Israeli
aggression and colonization and many other issues pertaining to Palestinian
human rights and the Arab territories still under the Israeli occupation,
let alone the savage crimes against the Palestinian people.
Al-Balagh weekly 19 June 2001.
The weekly chief editor has published an article
dealing with last week's program by Sanaa Radio on water crisis in Yemen.
He says his issue is in need of much attention by specialists and mass
media men because it represents a question of life or death for many areas,
towns and villages. A crisis such as that threatening the basin of Sanaa,
expected to drain away by the year 2010 if necessary measures are not taken
to stop the present rate of water consumption that is unparallel with the
basin's water resources. He says if government officials would not deal
seriously with this disaster, it would mean a mass migration of the capital
inhabitants for lack of water and subsequently it would change into a deserted
city. This would also mean an economic loss of billions of dollars.
The writer maintains that water crisis in Yemen is
well-known and many studies about it had been prepared showing ways of
tackling it. But the actual problem is that the solutions do not find those
to implement.
|