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Protests held in Yemen against president

There were large protests in Yemen on Friday
There were large protests in Yemen on Friday

Hundreds of thousands of Yemeni protesters demanding President Ali Abdullah Saleh's resignation have marched in the country’s capital of Sanaa, raising tensions as troops deployed to try to prevent protests spreading.

Security forces closed off all access routes to the capital from yesterday afternoon while armed civilians loyal to the veteran president also took to the city’s streets, according to reports.

However, in an apparent bid to avoid a confrontation with Saleh loyalists, demonstrators marched in a part of northern Sanaa that is guarded by an armoured division led by a general who has defected to the opposition.

The marchers started off from University Square - now dubbed Change Square by protesters - sticking to nearby streets and within the area controlled by the general's troops.

Sanaa has been left without electricity since yesterday afternoon and most petrol stations in the capital have turned off the taps, semi-paralysing the capital.

The massive deployment by troops loyal to Saleh followed an opposition call to step up protests against his rule with the political process deadlocked in the face of the president's long absence abroad.

Demonstrations were also staged in Taez, Yemen's second largest city and a flashpoint in anti-Saleh protests which have swept the impoverished state since late January.

Saleh has been receiving medical treatment in Saudi Arabia for wounds sustained in a 3 June bomb attack on his Sanaa palace compound.

"We have called for intensifying the challenge in order to move towards a peaceful solution," said Huria Mashhur, spokeswoman of the opposition National Council, an umbrella group of anti-Saleh forces.

"The political process has reached an impasse because of Saleh's refusal to sign the Gulf plan," she said, adding that protests should be kept up "until the fall of the regime."

The Gulf plan proposes that Saleh transfer power to his vice president within 30 days in exchange for a promise of immunity from prosecution.

Saleh vowed last month to return soon.

In southern Yemen and Taez, armed tribesmen clashed with Saleh loyalists in the elite Republican Guards at dawn, according to local residents.

Yemen's ruling party, the General People's Congress, accused the Common Forum parliamentary opposition bloc - the main component of the National Council - of plotting to "take power by force" by mobilising young protesters.

It held the opposition "responsible for the consequences" of any violence and called for "serious and responsible dialogue."