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Anger flares up in Yemeni town - Middle East - Al Jazeera English
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AfricaAmericasAsia-PacificCentral & South AsiaEuropeMiddle EastFocusOpinionFeaturesInteractiveSpotlightBriefingsYour ViewsRiz KhanWitnessInside StoryListening PostPeople & PowerMore??Counting the CostNewsThe Business Blog??? Middle East Anger flares up in Yemeni town Protests erupt in Taiz a day after deadly anti-government demonstrations and president's rejection of proposal to leave. Last Modified: 09 Apr 2011 13:53
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Send Feedback Al Jazeera's special correspondent reports on anti-government and pro-Saleh protests on Friday [Reuters]Angry demonstrations have erupted in the southern Yemeni town of Taiz, as people rally against the killing of pro-democracy protesters there.
About 100,000 people marched in Taiz on Saturday, the Associated press reported. This follows the death of four demonstrators after security forces opened fired and shot tear gas at protesters the day before.
Demonstrators are blaming the local governor, chief of security and leader of the ruling party for the violence which left about 400 people injured in the earlier protests.
The fresh?protests?come as Yemen recalled its envoy from Qatar over a dispute?on a Gulf Arab plan for President Ali Abdullah Saleh to step down.
Saba, the official Yemeni news agency,?said?the ambassador?was recalled for consultation on the recent statement made by Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassem about the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council's (GCC)?offer of mediation between Saleh and the opposition.
The GCC proposed that Saleh hand over power to his deputy in return for immunity from prosecution for him and his family.
Saleh rejected the?offer in a speech before tens of thousands of cheering supporters in the capital Sanaa on Friday.
Rallying cry
More than two dozen Yemenis were wounded by gunfire during Friday's opposition protests in Taiz [Reuters]Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators gathered in Sanaa and across Yemen on Friday - some in support of Saleh - but many more continuing to call for his immediate ouster.
The death?of the demonstrators in taiz?caused a rallying cry across the country, and saw protests continue for a second straight day.
In Taiz, activist Ghazi al-Samei said protesters were in the yard in front of the governor's office and had been there since Friday. The demonstrators, joined by several members of parliament, are demanding the governor's removal and trial.
Abdel-Malek al-Youssefi, another activist, said tanks were at the city's outskirts to prevent people from other towns taking part in the rally and that many supporters of the ruling Congress Party changed their allegiances and joined the ranks of the opposition, the AP said.
Saturday also saw?thousands of anti-government protesters take to the strests of other major cities, including?Ibb, al-Hudaydah and Hadramawt, in support of the Taiz protesters.
Normal life was completely paralysed in Aden, where government offices, schools, shops and services came to a standstill.
Protesters have been calling since January for the departure of Saleh, who has been in power since 1978.
Calls for departure
Saleh initially accepted an offer by Saudi Arabia and other Gulf Arab states trying to broker an end to bloody protests and hold talks with the opposition.
But he later rejected the plan for his exit in a speech broadcast on state television on Friday.
"We were born free, and we have free will, and they have to respect our wishes. We reject any coup against democracy, the constitution and our freedom," he told supporters in Sanaa.
?Saleh said: "Our power comes from the power of our great people, not from Qatar, not from anyone else. This is blatant interference in Yemeni affairs."
Al Jazeera's correspondent in Sanaa said: "Saleh addressed his supporters to make a total rejection of the offer put forward by the Gulf Co-operation Council.
"According to that proposal, they had called for him to stand down and hand power to a coalition of tribal leaders and other political figures. But he said, 'I reject, I reject, I reject'.
"He singled out Qatar and Al Jazeera and said, 'We don't have to follow their agenda'."
The GCC has invited Saleh and the opposition to a mediation session in Saudi Arabia. But the government has described the proposal as unconstitutional.
More than 120 people have been killed since Yemen's protests calling for an end to Saleh's rule began on February 11, inspired by popular uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt.
Source: Al Jazeera and agencies
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Send Feedback Topics in this articlePeopleAli Abdullah SalehHamad bin Jassim Al ThaniAbu Bakr al-KurbiCountryYemenQatarSaudi ArabiaEgyptTunisiaCitySanaaTaizAdenOrganisationGulf Co-operation Council Featured on Al Jazeera
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