Yahoo – AFP,
December 4, 2017
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| Yemen's ex-president Ali Abdullah Saleh addressing loyalists in Sanaa on March 10, 2011 (AFP Photo/MOHAMMED HUWAIS) |
Sanaa (AFP)
- Yemen's ex-president Ali Abdullah Saleh, who was killed on Monday, ruled the
Arabian Peninsula country for more than three decades, remaining a key player
long after his 2012 resignation.
Adept at
navigating Yemen's complex politics, he survived civil war, rebellion in the
north, an Al-Qaeda insurgency in the south and a June 2011 bomb attack on his
palace that wounded him badly.
In 2014 he
allied with his former enemies, Huthi Shiite rebels from Yemen's north, to seek
revenge against those who forced him from power.
But the
collapse of their alliance was the beginning of the end for the wily leader.
A stocky
man with piercing eyes and a moustache, Saleh was for decades Yemen's most
powerful man.
In 2015, a
UN panel of experts accused him of corruption, saying he may have amassed up to
$60 billion the country descended into poverty during his 33 years in power.
Hailing
from the same Zaidi minority as the Huthis, Saleh joined the army aged 20 and
took part in the 1962 coup against Yemen's Zaidi imamate.
The ensuing
six-year civil war ended in victory for Egyptian-backed nationalists who in
1968 formed the Yemen Arab Republic, also known as North Yemen.
A few
months earlier, an independent South Yemen had been formed following the
British withdrawal. It would eventually become the Communist-ruled People's
Democratic Republic of Yemen.
Reunification
Saleh showed
his leadership skills at an early age and swiftly climbed North Yemen's
military and political ladder.
Following
the June 1978 assassination of president Ahmad al-Ghashmi, a constituent
assembly elected Saleh -- by then a colonel -- president of North Yemen.
![]() |
A picture
from June 1, 2000 shows Ali Abdullah Saleh diving during free time
at his
private presidential club (AFP Photo)
|
He
immediately surrounded himself with close aides, notably his brothers,
appointing them to key military and security posts.
Saleh
deftly steered the country towards reunification in 1990 and four years later
crushed a southern secession bid.
He became
Yemen's first directly elected president in 1999, winning more than 96 percent
of the vote, but elections during his tenure were widely criticised and he was
accused of stifling dissent.
Saleh
became a US ally in the fight against Al-Qaeda, allowing drone strikes on
Yemeni territory, the first of which in 2002 killed the group's Yemen chief,
Qaed Salim Sinan al-Harithi.
Between
2004 and 2010, Saleh fought several wars against the Huthis, who had long
complained of marginalisation.
In the late
2000s he also grappled with growing pro-independence demonstrations in the
south.
But the
first real challenge to his rule came with the eruption in 2011 of Arab
Spring-inspired protests that brought thousands of people onto the streets.
Saleh clung
to power amid a deadly crackdown on demonstrators demanding an end to his
regime.
He left
Yemen for Saudi Arabia in June 2011 to receive medical treatment after being
burned in a bomb attack on his presidential compound, but returned less than
four months later.
He
eventually ceded power in February 2012 under a Gulf-brokered deal that granted
him immunity from prosecution.
'Dancing
on snakes'
Vice
President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi took power after Saleh's resignation but
struggled to assert his authority.
The
ex-president remained behind the scenes, refusing to go into exile and remaining
head of his General People's Congress party.
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Ali
Abdullah Saleh addressing parliament in Sanaa in
October 2001 (AFP Photo/KHALED
FAZAA)
|
The Huthis'
seizure of Sanaa in September 2014 would have been impossible without support
from Saleh loyalists, analysts said.
An expert
report to the UN Security Council alleged Saleh provided "direct
support" to the Huthis through funding and the backing of elite forces
still under his influence.
Hadi in
February 2015 fled to the southern city of Aden after escaping house arrest in
Sanaa, then to Saudi Arabia as the rebels advanced south.
Yassin Makkawi,
an adviser to Hadi, in 2015 described the ex-president as a "tyrant",
saying "the Huthis are puppets in the hands of Saleh".
A coalition
led by Saudi Arabia, which feared the Huthis would help its arch-rival Iran
spread its influence in Yemen, launched air strikes and sent ground troops to
Yemen in support of Hadi.
That
escalation has since killed more than 8,750 people and dragged Yemen towards
what the UN calls the world's worst humanitarian crisis.
The
intervention helped loyalists win back control of large parts of the south but
they were unable to dislodge the Huthis from Sanaa and other key strongholds.
Saleh was
reported to have remained in the capital and boasted: "I will never leave
Sanaa."
But in
mid-2017, his alliance with the Huthis began to collapse amid simmering
resentment over money, power-sharing and suspected backdoor dealings.
When Saleh
reached out to the Saudi-led coalition last week, the Huthis accused him of
"great treason" and staging a "coup" against "an
alliance he never believed in".
A smart
tactician who had portrayed himself as a "saviour" after his
resignation, Saleh once compared ruling Yemen to "dancing on the heads of
snakes".
But Saleh's
gamble in quitting his alliance with the Huthis proved to be a fatal step.
As gun
battles rocked the capital on Monday, the Huthis announced that Saleh had been
killed, and a video supplied to AFP by the rebels showed what appeared to be
his corpse.
Hours
later, his party confirmed the news.
At the age
of 75, the man who had shaped much of Yemen's post-independence history was
dead.



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