22 - May 27 thru June 2, 2002, Vol
XI


Al-Jamaheer weekly, organ of the Arab Baath
Socialist party (Syrian organization), 19 May 2002.
Main Headlines:
-Yemen’s embassy building in Damascus,
sold
-Aden Hotel sold for US$ 50 thousand
-Political security officer in Taiz orders
demolition of a citizen’s house
-American security unit arrives in Sana’a
-Gang forfeits prime minister’s signature
-First goods boycotting conference wrapped
up in Dubai
Editor in chief says in an article that the constitution guarantees
the citizen’s right to political affiliation, freedom of expression and
thought. It also guarantees his right to safeguard his property and honor.
It is not permissible to arrest him or storm his house or confiscate his
rights without a legal warrant.
Pursuant to this concept, the authority policy m not violate this rule
least it should change into a factor causing a political rift. Sit-ins
implemented under various aims must not distance us from the rule of democratic
practice and we should resort to the logic and reason because this would
guarantee dealing with matters according to their legal data.
This means that dictated outside conditions must be subject to criteria
of national an d pan-Arab interest rule and that of democratic and constitutional
action. It should be in a way the political decision is to be understood
not as a tool easy to mould or manipulate as much as the condition of addressing
institutions and interests. This is necessary to keep the political decision
away from embarrassment and renders it as balanced, in addition to preserving
national cohesion. Certainly that does not apply to any kind of sabotage
act because such an act would harm the homeland and violate the constitutional
rule.
As-Sahwa weekly 23 May 2002.
Main Headlines:
-MP’s reject electricity dose, PGC’’s deputies
accuse Islah of siding with people
-Islah headquarters in Shara’ab stormed
-Report on free zones, hampered
-Islah denounces ‘’militarization’’ of
universities
-Sheikh al-Ahmer foils the government’s
trickery regarding electricity
Columnist Zaid al-Shami confirms in an article that stable atmospheres
usually serve the ruling party better than others. Therefore it has to
issue directives to its official writers to write in a proper way. They
have to know that none has the right to deprive anybody of his citizenship
right. He who is in power does not possess the power to eliminate another,
nor to force him to be a mere echo to what he wants. The rightful word
would benefit an official more that harm him and serve the authority as
well. The one who spells out an opinion should not be deemed a demon and
the ruling party has no right to install itself an authority giving directives
and orders to other parties on how to adopt stands.
We are living the present reality and well aware of the fact that the
democratic margin is not enough. We are aware that the use of money and
authority constitutes the basis for maintaining influence and rule in the
name of democracy and freedom. We are dealing with this situation as reality
that would not change in overnight.
There are very big mistakes committed and large amounts of public money
are wasted as well as confiscation of the people’s rights. The ruling party
and its government have to admit and recognize the existence of citizens
living on this land. That they have rights they must enjoy and that the
constitution allows political plurality. These citizens have the right
to organise themselves in parties, having their own stands that can be
in accordance or opposed to the government. These are the rules of the
democratic game, so the government should not get angry for that.
Al-Wahdawi weekly, organ of the Nasserite People’s
Unionist Organization 21 may 2002.
Main Headlines:
-Gunman retain military commander in Marib
-Government freezes investment in a gas
project
-Clashes between tribes and army in Sarwah
-Countdown started for war between Yemen
and Eritrea
-Palestinian resistance: No back down from
martyrdom operations
-Boycott conference calls for refusing
foreign funding
The newspaper’s editorial is devoted to deal with the Yemeni unity anniversary,
describing 22 May 1990 as a date when healthy and sound life returned to
the homeland to inaugurate the Yemeni people’s march towards construction
and development.
All the people forces and energies join hands in compensation for the
horrible past of poverty, ignorance and deprivation. That past has gone
and present day and future Yemen have come back with an effective role
in the face of most difficult circumstances. In order to see that role
gets stronger, internally and externally, we have to warn against tendencies
of individualized assessment of the course of national construction and
unleashing judgments on it out of an individual angle. It should not be
subjugated to an endless series of demands leading to damaging the great
accomplishments of the unity. Such demands could be listed under calls
for revising and amending documents of the unity, as happened for the constitution
and elections law under justification of parliamentary majority.
The national political system is still at the beginning and has long
way to go. What we nowadays consider majority, may turn to be untrue according
to later criterion founded on singling out forces and expression of interests.
The obvious criterion of today and maybe for unpredictable span of time,
dictates on us to not exaggerate in our judgments on issues still at their
beginnings.
Al-Ihya’a al-Arabi weekly , organ of the National
Arab Baath Socialist party 23 May 2002.
Main Headlines:
-With the reunification, the nation’s hopes
for comprehensive unity enhanced
-On eve of 22 May, president Saleh: We
renew the call for fully ending of blockade against Iraq
-Armed clashes renewed between Wa’ela and
Dahm tribes
-Student movement faces intentional disintegration
-Jordanian human rights society demands
pardon for former deputy Toujan al-Faisal
-First local councils conference, concluded
-People’s boycott proves fruitful
The newspaper’s political editor writes on Yemen’s unity 12th anniversary
saying that it represents the most important and dearest of the people’s
achievements.
The article maintains that now, after the unity has taken root, it
is time that it needs leaderships translating ambitions of this accomplishment
and rising by their work and loyalty to the level of this great gain. They
must be as forces esteeming high the size of sacrifices the Yemeni people
have offered to realize it. They would then prepare precepts for construction
and building of foundations for the aspired future this great Yemeni people
deserve
ATTARIQ weekly, 21 May 2002.
Main Headlines:
-USA normalizes its military ties with
Eritrea
-One child killed, another injured in explosion
in Shabwa
-Attack on commander of armored brigade
in Marib
-30 US military experts arrive in Yemen
Mr Jihad Jameel Muhsin says in an article that official statistics issued
in 1994 indicated that volume of child labor in Yemen was exceeding 400
thousand children at ages ranging between 10 to 14 years. But unofficial
sources confirmed that children’s number working in difficult and hard
jobs was much more than mentioned in government statistics.
An international humanitarian organization lashed against the state
and family in Yemen and drew the attention to causes of child labor percentage
increase and spread of the phenomenon in towns and countryside. The organization
ascribed the phenomenon to low rates of development and deterioration of
economic situation in the country during the last decade. Those situations
led to the increase in proportion of poverty ad deprivation and rise in
prices accompanying the government’s implementation of economic reforms
program, ongoing since 1995. The organization requested the Yemeni government
to shoulder its humanitarian responsibility towards speeding up tackling
the problem of child labor. It says such an end would not be attained but
through realizing an actual development at all economic levels. The government
has to curb spread of the phenomenon by accurately determining its volume,
studying situations of families and their social conditions and choosing
a number of children able to be professionally qualified to upgrade their
standard and return them to labor market.
Al-Balagh weekly, 24 May 2002.
Main Headlines:
-Binladen appears anew, threatens attacking
an American city
-British prime minister denies being Bush’s
lapdog
-America uses stick-and-carrot policy,
Yemen behaves cautiously
-Yemen challenges Guantanamo investigations
In his article, the editor in chief expressed the wish that the Palestinian
authority and chairman Yasser Arafat would have voiced their intention
of reforms by their own will, not in response to Zionist conditions.
Such position would not follow the reforms course as much as meeting
Zionism’s terms demanding termination whoever the Zionists deem as not
responding to them in political or security talks. It also means kicking
out those sympathizing with intifadha and resistance movements.
Reform intended by Sharon is aimed at advancing to high positions those
who would easily respond to Palestinian authority orientations and would
not act as tumbling stone in the Palestinian-Israeli negotiations and on
he road of the so-called ‘’peace’’ conference called for by terrorist Sharon.
That is the type of peace wanted by Sharon.
When he was besieged inside his headquarters, Arafat announced he would
prefer to be martyr. At present he describes martyrs and their operations
as ‘’acts of violence’’ and condemns them.
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