Protests seek Saleh trial as UN delegation visits Yemen

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The brief visit by a delegation of representatives from the council’s 15 members is to “support the political transition” led by President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, British representative Mark Lyall Grant told reporters in the capital.
“We believe that President Hadi’s leadership has been instrumental in driving forward the reforms necessary to make Yemen a more stable and prosperous country,” said Grant.
The team held talks with Hadi and government ministers, state television said.
UN special envoy to Yemen, Jamal Benomar, said at a ceremony after the talks that the visit was “historic and unprecedented in the region” and was “to stress the importance of pressing ahead with the political process”.
Another member of the team, Morocco’s Security Council representative Mohamed Loulichki, too said the trip was unprecedented in the region and “stresses the great interest of the international community in the situation in Yemen”.
With the UN officials in the capital, demonstrators in their thousands took to the streets to demand Saleh be brought before the courts.
“The people want to put the killer on trial,” chanted the demonstrators, referring to Saleh who was eased out of office in February 2012 after three decades of rule following the UN-backed and Gulf-brokered deal.
Demonstrators also called for a “return of funds stolen by the former president and his family”.
The Youth of the Revolution, a group that was the main engine of the year-long protests that finally led to Saleh’s ouster, also called for an international probe into violations and crimes committed by his regime.
It urged the UN Security Council to “freeze the funds owned by the leaders of the former regime and return them to public treasury”.
Saleh was ousted under a deal which also stipulated restructuring the army and integrating military and security forces under a single command, a task that remains difficult with Saleh’s sons and relatives still occupying senior security posts.
The delegation’s visit comes as Sanaa struggles to organise a national dialogue conference that would result in a new constitution and presidential and parliamentary elections in February 2014.
UN envoy Benomar said that convening the dialogue “is close” but he did not elaborate.
He told Yemen’s state television that the “process is difficult”, and urged all Yemeni parties to “realise that there is a historic opportunity and join the national dialogue without preconditions to solve all Yemeni issues, including the question of the south”.

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