CR IP TI ON BS SU
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2011
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Famed Islamic school fights forces of change
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Yemeni president to quit in coming days Foes unimpressed by Saleh’s latest vow
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Saudis behead 8 Bangladeshis RIYADH: Eight Bangladeshis have been beheaded in the Saudi capital after being condemned for robbery and murder, local media said yesterday, citing the interior ministry. The ministry said the men executed on Friday were part of a group of 11 Bangladeshis who had stolen goods from a warehouse after tying up its Egyptian guard, who was left behind to die. The other three Bangladeshis were sentenced to an unspecified number of years in jails and a lashing. The ministry also announced the execution of two Saudis on Friday, which brought the number of beheadings for a single day to 10, and the total number in the kingdom to at least 56 this year.
Dow, Saudi firm sign $20bn deal RIYADH: Dow Chemical Co and the Saudi Arabian Oil Co said yesterday that they signed an agreement that advances their plan to build one of the world’s biggest chemical plants in Saudi Arabia. The $20 billion complex is expected to begin production in 2015. The two companies agreed to a joint venture for Sadara Chemical Co, which will own the plant being built in the desert kingdom. The companies estimate it will generate about $10 billion in revenue annually within a few years of operation. Dow and Saudi Aramco together are investing about $12 billion, and a portion of Sadara will be sold to shareholders in a public offering in 2013 or 2014.
SANAA: Anti-government protesters hold up placards that read in Arabic ‘He who kills us, does not rule us’ as they march demanding the ouster of Yemen’s President Ali Abdullah Saleh yesterday. (Inset) An image taken off Yemen TV shows Saleh giving a televised speech yesterday where he said he is ready to step down within days. Saleh is wearing protective gloves following burns sustained during an attack on his compound in June 2011. — AFP
Max 37º Min 20º Low Tide 04:16 & 16:50 High Tide 10:22 & 22:55
SANAA: Yemen’s President Ali Abdullah Saleh said yesterday he would step down in the next few days after months of protests against his 33-year rule that risked tipping the dirt-poor nation bordering Saudi Arabia into civil war and economic collapse. “I reject power and I will continue to reject it, and I will be leaving power in the coming days,” Saleh said in a speech on state television. But opponents were sceptical of the wily political survivor who has backed out of a Gulf-brokered power transition plan three times this year. They argue the speech is a manoeuvre to ease pressure ahead of a briefing to the UN Security Council by UN Yemen envoy Jamal Benomar, who left Sanaa empty-handed after days of shuttle diplomacy between the opposition and the ruling party. Protests against Saleh’s rule paralysed Yemen, weakening government control over swathes of the country and fanning fears AlQaeda’s regional wing may use the upheaval to expand its foothold near oil-shipping routes through the Red Sea. Diplomats have said they are close to getting international consensus for issuing a Security Council resolution which may add to pressures on the country to finalise a power transfer. “This is new propaganda from Saleh before Yemen is discussed at the security council,” said Mohammed AlSabri, a spokesman for the opposition’s political coalition. “Four months have passed since he said he accepted the Gulf transition deal, so what is stopping him? He doesn’t even need a few days to do it.” The veteran leader has been clinging to power while opposition and ruling party representatives cast about for a formula to reach a deal. It has been deadlocked over a debate over Continued on Page 13