02 - January 11th thru January 17th
1999, Vol IX
Yemeni-UK
Relations:
RAPID DETERIORATION
The Republic of Yemen and the United Kingdom barely came out of the
cold bilateral relations that followed Yemen's 1994 civil war. President
Ali Abdullah Saleh and his team, coming victorious out of the civil war,
were not happy with Britain's position during the war.
Through patience and foresight, the two countries were able to collect
the pieces and work on new, improved relations. Indeed, a warm and vibrant
bilateral relationship was achieved in a very short time.
By 1996, the Yemeni Foreign Minister at the time, Dr. Abdul-Karim Al-Iryani,
visited London, and the UK Foreign Minister, Mr. Malcolm Rifkind, responded
by a visit to Sanaa. Since then, several senior officials, parliamentary
and academic delegations exchanged visits. The climax came with the visit
of President Ali Abdullah Saleh to London in 1998.
Parallel to the official warming up, many private trade delegations
were popping in and out of the two countries in search of business opportunities.
It all looked wonderful. Then all of a sudden, there was trouble.
Apparently, London reached a not-so glorious assessment of Yemen's
democratization process as well as of the level of tolerance of the rulers
in Sanaa. With that background, new difficulties helped break the camel's
back.
At the same time, Yemeni authorities grew less and less comfortable
with the British role - locally and in the region. Locally, the return
of warm bilateral relations did not lead to any sizable bilateral assistance
or investment from the UK. Official and private British involvement with
Yemen remained minimal.
Within the region, the teaming of the UK with the US in the recent
bombing of Iraq dismayed many Yemenis, including senior officials. Hence
the scene was being gradually prepared for a cooling off of the relations.
The first problem was the Abyan crisis. Kidnappers had picked up 16
tourists - 12 Britons, 2 Americans and 2 Australians, on 29th December.
The next day, army and security units stormed the hideout of the kidnappers
in an effort to free the hostages. Unfortunately, there were casualties.
Among the tourists, 3 Britons and one Australian were killed.
The UK government was upset, because it had advised against the use
of force. It was also upset by what it perceived as a mis-reporting of
events.
There were more complications. Sanaa, citing national sovereignty and
proper diplomatic conduct, is reluctant to give full access to a Scotland
Yard team that arrived here to investigate the case.
Then there was another crisis. The Daily Telegraph ran a story on January
3rd quoting an official at the Foreign Office in London. He said that Yemen's
application for membership to the Commonwealth of Nations may not succeed.
That triggered a hasty and negative response from Sanaa. In a communique
issued by the Foreign Ministry on Monday 4th, the Yemeni government announced
that it was no longer interested in pursuing the membership application.
A clarification from the British embassy in Sanaa did not help though
it assured that the article did not represent the UK Government's views
and that British support for Yemen's membership did not change.
There was yet another crisis. Five British nationals were arrested,
among others, on charges of sabotage. The Yemeni Government had earlier
announced that the Abyan kidnappers were linked to fundamentalist/terrorist
groups based in London.
Finally, John Brooke, a British national was kidnapped from the Haliburton
compound near Marib on January 9th. The identity or demands of the kidnappers
were not known as the paper went to press.
It looks like Yemeni-UK relations are destined for a deep freeze, unless
the two sides snap out of the present mood.
Appeal
to President Saleh:
"Is there room for independent
journalism?"
There is a rising level of attack against me, the Yemen Times, and
generally all opposition newspapers in Yemen. Three different articles
on the last page of Issue # 837 dated 7/1/1999 of 26th September Newspaper
- owned by the State of Yemen - attacked Al-Wahdawi Newspaper (mouthpiece
of the Nasserite Party), Al-Shoura Newspaper (mouthpiece of Ittihad Al-Qiwa
Al-Sha'abiyah Party), and the Yemen Times (an independent newspaper).
It is illegal to use state resources in inter-party political competition.
If the attacks had been in newspapers representing the People's General
Congress, which also carry lots of attack, it would have been less objectionable,
though the language used is pretty cheap and low.
The 26th September Newspaper, which is managed by the press secretary
of the president, also carried another article on page 2. This article
openly threatened me. First, it accused me of high treason, of conspiring
against the supreme interests of the nation, and of working for Western
intelligence agencies, international zionism and the masonic movement.
But that is not all. The paper, in addition, ominously wrote: "...Saqqaf
is working his way to suicide..."
I want to appeal to President Ali Abdullah Saleh who has worked hard
to take Yemen from totalitarianism to a democratizing system. The President
repeatedly stated his commitment for tolerance and differences of opinion.
Printing open threats in official newspapers against editors and journalists
is contrary to all that. It is contrary to basic rule of law.
The President and his men know very well that I've never worked against
the interests of Yemen. Moreover, I do not see myself as an enemy of President
Saleh or the regime. I do criticize their mistakes, but that falls within
my duty as a journalist. I am actually serving Yemen's interests.
Mr. President, let me say that as editor of the Yemen Times, I cannot
turn it into a carbon copy of the official newspapers. However, if issuing
the Yemen Times will cost me my life, as the threats indicate, I do not
want to continue with it.
This matter is in your hands!
Abdulaziz Al-Saqqaf
Mid-Term
Exams
ASSESSING 3.5 MILLION KIDS
About 3.5 million students and pupils in the public and private school
systems of Yemen just concluded their mid-term examinations. The results
will be announced in two weeks - after the Eid Al-Fitr holidays, according
to a source at the Ministry of Education.
Parents as well as students/pupils lived through difficult times over
the last few days. "The fact that the exams coincided with Ramadhan
meant that families had to make a double adjustment. First because of the
Ramadhan timetable and change in lifestyle; and second because of the emergency-like
situation declared at home to meet the requirements of our children to
prepare for their exams," complained a Sanaa-based father who has five
children at school. "It is not over yet. Now we will not be able to
enjoy Eid Al-Fitr holidays because we will live with the anxiety of waiting
for the results. I wish the Ministry of Education would make the schools
announce the results immediately," he added. Mid-term examinations
represent 30-50% of the overall grades for the year.
Students in the 9th and 12th grades do not have mid-terms. Their performance
depends on the final exams that take place at the end of the academic year.
University students have also been off the hook. Their mid-terms (for
colleges still based on the old year-long evaluation system) and the final
semester exams (for colleges based on the term/quarter system) will take
place after Eid Al-Fitr.
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