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View Full Version : Yemen' president: "Men and women mixing at protests is against Islam"



Nothing Human Is Alien
17th April 2011, 07:39
SANAA, Yemen – Yemen's anti-government movement took up the issue of women's rights in the conservative Muslim nation on Saturday, as thousands of demonstrators seeking the president's ouster denounced his comments against the participation of women in protest rallies.

In a speech Friday, President Ali Abdullah Saleh said the mingling of men and women at protests in the capital was against Islamic law. Demonstrators, including thousands of women, responded by marching through the capital of Sanaa and several other cities, shouting: "Saleh, beware of injuring women's honor."

"This insult has made us more determined to remain at the opposition squares with the men to topple the ugly regime," said Jameela al-Qabsi, a female professor at an education college.

Though it was a young woman who first led anti-Saleh demonstrations on a university campus in late January, women didn't begin turning out in large numbers until early March. It was a startling step considering the Muslim nation is a largely tribal society with deeply conservative social and religious traditions.

Many Yemeni women remain out of sight and conceal themselves in public under black head-to-toe robes. The issue of child brides in Yemen has also drawn international criticism. But unlike in neighboring Saudi Arabia, women in Yemen are permitted to vote, run for parliament and drive cars.

Two months of near-daily protests and defections by key allies in the military, powerful tribes and diplomatic corps have failed to bring an end to Saleh's 32-year autocratic rule over the impoverished and fragile nation in the Arabian peninsula.

A crackdown on protesters by Saleh's forces has killed more than 120 people, according to Yemeni rights groups, but has not deterred crowds from gathering.

On Saturday, a group of female protesters presented the chief prosecutor with a complaint against Saleh for his remarks. Amat al-Salam Abdullah, one of the protesters, said the prosecutor ordered an investigation.

"I don't rule out that the president has been traumatized as a result of the involvement of tens of thousands of women in the demonstrations calling for his downfall," said Faiza al-Sharji, a female university professor.

The youth movement leading the anti-government protests took up the women's cause, calling for people to come out in millions on Sunday for a day of "honor and dignity."

The youth movement said in a statement that Saleh's comments were "a continuation of his violations against the Yemeni people after he killed them and accused them of being agents and outlaws."

Advocacy for women's rights in Yemen is rooted in the 1967-1990 period when the once-independent south had a socialist government. After unification, women in the south became more marginalized, resulting in high unemployment among female university graduates.

Meanwhile, Yemen's opposition said a delegation would travel to the Saudi capital Sunday to explain their position to Saudi and other Gulf mediators, said spokesman Mohammed Sabri.

Last week, the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council offered a proposal for ending the unrest in which Saleh would transfer power to his deputy.

The opposition criticized the proposal for not including a call for the power transfer to happen immediately. It also offered immunity to Saleh from prosecution, which the opposition rejected.

Sasha
17th April 2011, 12:43
oh dear, he is really grasping at straws now isnt he?

agnixie
19th April 2011, 14:05
oh dear, he is really grasping at straws now isnt he?

He probably realized that blaming Euro-Al-Qaeda-Mossad agents didn't exactly help the other american puppets in the region. Maybe the west will turn a blind eye if they "invite" the Saudis to act as proxies of the imperialist powers though, who knows.

IndependentCitizen
19th April 2011, 16:05
I'd like to see the verse in the Qu'ran where it says Women and Men can't rise up against their anti-democratic leaders...

Ocean Seal
19th April 2011, 16:12
And where is America to the rescue for the Yemeni people. Where are the tanks, the planes, where is the propaganda that tells us this is what we had to do. Come on Mr. President; Why aren't you telling us that we had no other choice but to invade Yemen? Big speeches? Air time in the press? Deploying our troops to come to the aid of Yemen as they so nobly did for Libya?

My my it appears that Mr. President is unaware of the situation.
Oh wait nevermind I forgot the American bourgeoisie already own Yemen. I guess there is no point to invading. Sorry about the post everyone my misunderstanding.

Wanted Man
19th April 2011, 16:48
It sure is. :)