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- <text id=94TT0668>
- <title>
- May 23, 1994: Yemen:Splitting at the Seam
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 23, 1994 Cosmic Crash
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- YEMEN, Page 43
- Splitting at the Seam
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> A two-man rivalry escalates into war, threatening the four-year-old
- union between the North and South
- </p>
- <p>By Marguerite Michaels--Reported by Dean Fischer/Cairo and Ann M. Simmons/Washington
- </p>
- <p> As the Yemeni capital of San`a slumbered early last Wednesday
- morning, a Scud missile slammed into a crowded neighborhood
- on the northern outskirts of the city. Notoriously inaccurate,
- the Scud missed its intended target--the presidential palace--and destroyed a block of mud-brick houses. Twenty-five residents
- were killed in their sleep, their bodies scattered amid crumbled
- masonry and shreds of wicker baskets. Later, as bulldozers pushed
- away the rubble, workers trained fire hoses on the angry crowd
- to disperse it. The casualties were the first known civilian
- deaths in a violent struggle for power between two rival political
- leaders that has ruptured the four-year-old union between North
- and South Yemen.
- </p>
- <p> A year ago, the country's voters elected their first parliament,
- an unprecedented exercise in democracy by the authoritarian
- standards of the Arabian peninsula. But for the past two weeks,
- armies from the conservative North and socialist South have
- waged bloody but inconclusive armor and artillery battles in
- bitter rivalry over the division of political power and the
- distribution of oil revenues. "Unity is dead," said an Arab
- League official in Cairo, and so were hopes that political pluralism
- had taken root in traditionally monarchical Arabia.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the enthusiastic support of the Yemeni people, a successful
- coalition between North and South seemed unlikely. The two countries,
- notes Peter Rodman, director of Middle East studies at Washington's
- Center for Strategic and International Studies, "had different
- social and political evolutions." While both were dominated
- for three centuries by the Ottoman Turks, the Southern capital
- of Aden was seized by the British in 1839. After achieving independence
- from Britain in 1967, the South became the first Arab Marxist
- state. The North threw off the Turks after World War I and has
- been ruled by conservative tribes ever since.
- </p>
- <p> The collapse of Soviet patronage in South Yemen spurred a merger
- in May 1990. But the leader of the North, President Ali Abdullah
- Saleh, and the leader of the South, Vice President Ali Salem
- al-Beidh, bickered incessantly. They refused to completely merge
- their armies or their economies, and never built up any trust.
- "The power plays got to a point of no return," says Judith Kipper,
- guest scholar at the Brookings Institution.
- </p>
- <p> Friction intensified after last year's parliamentary elections,
- when Saleh awarded 21 of 31 Cabinet seats to his own party and
- a fundamentalist group from the North. Two months after the
- fundamentalist leader demanded the repeal of socialist-sponsored
- legislation last June, Al-Beidh angrily left San`a for the South
- and never returned.
- </p>
- <p> In an atmosphere of rampant lawlessness--kidnapping tourists,
- oil executives and diplomats is a favored way of registering
- complaints against the government--tensions between the North
- and South increased. Al-Beidh's walkout crippled the government's
- capacity to act, even preventing the passage of a budget for
- this year. In January hundreds of people protested price rises
- in the North. With inflation exceeding 100% and devaluation
- of the Yemeni riyal eroding incomes averaging less than $600
- a year, the government feared a recurrence of the food-price
- riots of December 1992, in which more than 100 people were killed.
- </p>
- <p> An attempt at reconciliation three months ago, brokered by Jordan,
- collapsed, and clashes quickly erupted between Northern and
- Southern army troops. Al-Beidh accused Saleh of siphoning off
- oil revenues from a newly opened field in a Southern province.
- While Yemen remains one of the Arab world's poorest and most
- populous states, the discovery of oil 10 years ago gave both
- North and South hope that their 14 million people would no longer
- be dependent on the largesse of their wealthy neighbors. Until
- the Gulf War, Yemen relied on money sent home by millions of
- Yemenis in the oil sheikdoms of the gulf. But Saleh's support
- of Iraq so infuriated King Fahd that he evicted nearly 1 million
- Yemeni workers from Saudi Arabia, severely disrupting the country's
- fragile economy.
- </p>
- <p> Last month, after a Northern tank brigade attacked and defeated
- a force from the South in a town northwest of San`a, the country
- was plunged into war. As the fighting carried on in the rugged
- mountains that line the former border between North and South,
- it was impossible to confirm either side's claims to imminent
- victory. "There is not a military solution to the Yemen problem,"
- said Robert Pelletreau, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for
- Near Eastern Affairs, who was trapped temporarily in San`a after
- a failed mediation attempt.
- </p>
- <p> Last week both sides dispatched emissaries throughout the Arab
- world. Neither, however, seemed eager for mediation. After separate
- meetings with Northern and Southern officials in Cairo, Egyptian
- President Hosni Mubarak said he saw no sign of an early end
- to hostilities. While the majority of Yemenis regard themselves
- as one nation, the blame for the turmoil rests squarely on two
- leaders who decided to settle their rivalry by starting a war.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-