Sunday, March 20, 2011

It is always a high voltage 72 dead in Yemen yesterday in Sana'a, Aden shots

SANA'A - It is always high voltage in Yemen. The clashes in the capital Sana'a yesterday killed at least 72 deaths and more than 400 injured, as reported by Ansa Aodi Foad, president of the Arab Community in Italy (coma), today the police fired on demonstrators in Aden, southern country. An initial budget of about 4 wounded, according to state witnesses.

The police and the army would open fire on demonstrators who were defending a barricade in the neighborhood of Moalli, Aden. According to witnesses, one protester was hit by a bullet, tear gas grenades from the other three. The police have failed to dismantle the barricades, resisting Aden two weeks ago.

Also today there is a new massive opposition rally. Tens of thousands of people took to the streets again today in the streets of Change, in Sana'a, demanding the resignation of the Yemeni president, Ali Abdullah Saleh. He told the news agency 'dpa'. The event takes place on the clashes in the capital Sana'a during a protest against the Yemeni President Ali Abdallah Saleh.

The severity of the death toll has prompted the government of Saleh - in power for 32 years - to proclaim a state of emergency. According to preliminary evidence to fire on the crowd was a group of government supporters stationed on the roofs of the houses that overlook the square dell'univesrità, where the event takes place, for its part, the police would use tear gas and - according to some sources - would also be resorted to firearms.

A Sanaa is "medical emergency" says Aodi, who is also chairman of the foreign doctors in Italy (AMSI), "hospitals are not enough to accommodate the wounded" who "were also brought in the mosques" because "c ' is even more room in the tents. " "Physicians who are in contact with us from Yemen are asking for help," says Aodi, also claim that "intervention by the international community" because "it does not happen what is happening in Libya." In Yemen, he concludes, "there is a real risk of civil war."

No comments:

Post a Comment