Yemeni protesters take part in a demonstration in Yemen's militia-controlled capital, Sanaa, calling for presidential elections and for Ahmed Ali Abdullah Saleh, the son of Yemen's former president Ali Abdullah Saleh who stepped down in early 2012, to run as a candidate, on March 13, 2015. AFP
AFP
Hundreds rallied in Yemen's militia-controlled capital on Friday to call for presidential elections and demand the son of ex-strongman Ali Abdullah Saleh run as a candidate.
Sanaa has been under the control of the Shia militia, known as Huthis, since September and President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi has fled to the southern city of Aden after escaping house arrest in the capital last month.
Saleh, who stepped down in February 2012 after a year-long popular uprising, has been accused of backing the Huthis, who are from the same Zaidi sect of Shia Islam as the ex-leader.
Gathered in Sabiin Square in Sanaa's southern district and near the residence of Saleh's son Ahmed, demonstrators chanted "The next president is Ahmed" and "Ahmed is our president".
The demonstration went by without incident, a day after Shia militiamen shot dead two protesters taking part in a rally in support of Western- and Gulf-backed Hadi.
Vehicles with loudspeakers urging Yemenis to join the pro-Ahmed rally circulated in Sanaa for two days before the demonstration.
Ahmed is Yemen's ambassador to the United Arab Emirates but rarely stays in his country's Gulf neighbour.
The six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council, of which the UAE is a member, had repeatedly slammed the Huthis' "coup d'etat" in Yemen and voiced support for Hadi.
During his father's rule, Ahmed Ali Abdullah Saleh was commander of the elite Republican Guard troops, a body that was dissolved by Hadi. Most of its soldiers however remained loyal to Ahmed.
Saleh has long been accused of attempting to hamper the country's political transition.
Yemen, a key US ally in the fight against Al-Qaeda, has descended into chaos since Saleh's ouster and the Huthi takeover has raised fears of the country collapsing into a failed state.