Yemeni police firing live rounds and tear gas killed one person and wounded many more yesterday in an attack on anti-regime protesters camping at a main square in the capital.
The dawn assault forced back demonstrators who had breached the limits of a concrete barrier put up by police at Sanaa’s University Square, where protesters have been staging a sit-in for almost three weeks.
It came two days after embattled Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh offered sweeping political reforms and pledged to protect protesters demanding an end to his three decades of iron-fisted rule.
Photo: Reuters
At least one demonstrator was killed and 300 suffered injuries, including from live bullets and tear gas, a medical committee set up by the protesters said.
A volunteer doctor accused the security forces of using poison gas, as television footage showed many people passed out in the street.
The attack raged in the morning as security forces blocked all roads leading to the square and prevented ambulances from reaching the area to evacuate the casualties, protest organizers said.
More than 30 protesters were shot with live rounds, while hundreds more were suffering from inhaling gases, medics at the square said.
A security official said that police were not planning to storm the rest of the sit-in at the square, but that they were aiming to contain the demonstration.
“We are not thinking of storming the square, but we have to return the demonstration to its size of yesterday, because the expansion of the sit-in has disturbed residents,” the official said, asking not to be named.
An Agence-France Presse correspondent said the security forces attacked demonstrators who had stretched the sit-in to neighboring streets beyond concrete blocks to demarcate the protest area.
“By 3am, security forces began to harass protesters and started to dismantle tents and megaphones,” 20-year-old protester Mohammed Saeed said.
He said the forces had brought in reinforcements after protesters confronted them and that by 5:30am, police fired live rounds and tear gas grenades.
A volunteer doctor at the square charged the security forces used a poison gas whose type was difficult to determine, while treatment to deal with its effect was not available at the field clinic.
“These are not tear gases. These are poisonous gases that disable the nerve and respiratory systems. People hit by those gases pass out,” said Iraqi doctor Hussein al-Joshaai, a nerve specialist.
“We do not have a treatment for this. We have asked the authorities to send us medicines, but we are still waiting,” he added.
Meanwhile, police opened fire at student demonstrators in Taez, about 160km south of Sana’a, said Bushra al-Maqtari, an organizer of anti-regime protests in the city.
She said two people were wounded in the protest that answered a call for civil disobedience at schools.
The brutal crackdown came despite Saleh’s promise in a speech on Thursday that he would protect demonstrators, whether they were for or against his rule. Saleh also pledged to devolve power to parliament through constitutional reforms that would be voted on in a referendum later this year.
His offer appeared to bow to pressure after more than a month of violent protests, was swiftly rejected by the opposition, which is demanding his immediate resignation.
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