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[Dehai-WN] Foreignpolicy.com: Yemen's Rocky Roadmap

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Wed, 12 Dec 2012 13:38:41 +0100

 <http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2012/12/10/yemens_rocky_roadmap>
Yemen's Rocky Roadmap


Yemenis hope that a planned National Dialogue will save the revolution. But
what abut the guys with the guns?


BY ADAM BARON | DECEMBER 12, 2012


Yemen is on edge. It's been more than a year since Yemen's longtime
president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, agreed to step down from power, but calm
still seems elusive. On Saturday, 17 soldiers were killed in an ambush by
alleged al Qaeda militants in the restive Mareb province, where the
government has appeared nearly powerless to stop frequent
<http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Middle-East/2012/Dec-05/197377-yemen-gunme
n-sabotage-oil-pipeline.ashx#axzz2Em9jF2oj> sabotage against oil pipelines
and electricity infrastructure. To the south,
<http://adammbaron.com/2012/12/07/on-recent-events-in-al-dhale/> recent
clashes between Yemeni forces and armed locals in the province of al-Dhale
have left at least three civilians dead, prompting protests about the
excessive use of force and inflaming anti-government sentiments in the
separatist hotbed. In the capital itself, nerves have been strained by a
string of attacks on security officials by
<http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/12/11/us-yemen-violences-idUSBRE8BA08X2
0121211> motorcycle-riding gunmen, the latest of which left a
counterterrorism officer seriously wounded.

Many local officials and Yemen-based diplomats insist that Yemen's
post-Saleh transition is moving forward. Such assurances notwithstanding,
anxiety is rampant across the country, fueled by fears that the various
factions of this divided nation will be unable to come together to prevent
Yemen from falling apart.

"Yemen can't move forward in a situation like this," said Hamza al-Kamaly,
an activist who was recently beaten while attending a demonstration against
a Saleh-era military commander. "The country is still divided, the military
is still divided, and the old regime still has a huge amount of power."

While street protests were the catalyst, Saleh's
<http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/11/23/us-yemen-idUSTRE7AM0D020111123>
exit from power was ultimately secured by an internationally backed
agreement, mediated by the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) last November. It
was essentially an elite compromise, forged between Saleh's ruling General
People's Congress (GPC) and the Joint Meeting Parties (JMP), a coalition of
Yemen's established opposition parties, aimed at securing a peaceful
transfer of power as the country appeared to be sliding towards anarchy.
<http://www.cnn.com/2011/11/19/world/meast/yemen-unrest/index.html>
Defections by key military leaders had split the Yemeni armed forces into
opposing halves. Factional clashes extended to the capital itself, and
government's control over much of the rest of the country appeared to
dissipate.

The immediate goal may have been securing a peaceful transition, but the
terms of the GCC deal provided the outline for a much broader process. Abdu
Rabbu Mansour Hadi, Saleh's longtime deputy, was tapped as a consensus
candidate for the presidency, ruling along with a unity government split
between the GPC and the opposition JMP during his two-year transitional
term. If all goes according to plan, 2014 will see the election of a new
president and a new parliament under a rewritten constitution, following the
reform of Yemen's split military and the peaceful resolution of years-old
disputes between the central government and increasingly powerful groups
outside of Yemen's formal power structure.

But regardless of inclusive aims, Yemen's transitional process was
ultimately the product of negotiations between traditional power brokers,
and it was aimed at pacifying key players at least as much as it was at
paving the way for a new future. Looking forward, the key question remains
whether Yemen's varied political factions will be able to come together to
bring the country towards stability while laying the groundwork for an
inclusive democracy. And as the people prepare for the highly anticipated
conference of
<http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/11/28/us-yemen-dialogue-idUSBRE8AR1AE20
121128> National Dialogue, achieving said goals continues to appear to be a
nearly insurmountable challenge, predicated on the ability of Yemeni
stakeholders to rise above crippling divisions to make the mutual
concessions necessary to make a true break with the past.

Once dismissed as an empty suit, Hadi, was thrust into the center of the
storm as a relative unknown. Since he took power he has surprised some
pessimists by his willingness to challenge allies of the former president.
Others hope that Hadi's governance style suggests a move away from the
heavily centralized rule of his predecessor. And, notably, after nearly a
year in office, Hadi has retained the backing of many Yemenis and the bulk
of the country's political establishment, including many fierce opponents of
his predecessor.

"There is progress," said Hamid al-Ahmar, a prominent tribal leader and
Islah politician who has long been one of the former president's most
outspoken critics. "We believe that Hadi today is leading the country, and
he is leading the revolution."

Such talk notwithstanding, the divisions within Yemen's elite linger on. The
key task of military restructuring still has a long way to go. Ahmed Ali,
Saleh's son, as well as General Ali Mohsen al-Ahmar, a former regime
strongman who is viewed as close to the Islamist Islah party (the largest
component of the JMP), still retain control of many of the nation's troops.

Meanwhile, even as many Yemenis have yearned for technocratic governance,
the cabinet has proven a deeply partisan body. The government's paralysis
amid mutual distrust has underscored the seemingly intractable nature of
divisions between the country's leaders. Far from healing, the deep wounds
splitting Yemen's political establishment have continued to fester, echoed
by a divisive media climate that often seems to present competing spheres of
reality.

Over a year after the agreement on the transfer of power, the hard work of
the transitional period has arguably yet to begin. Attention has shifted to
the upcoming conference of "National Dialogue," a key step in the
transitional roadmap outlined in the implementation mechanism of the GCC
agreement. The National Dialogue's stated goal is to provide an inclusive
forum for representatives of a range of groups -- political factions as well
as youth, women, and members of civil society -- to draft a new social
contract for post-Saleh Yemen, sketching out the shape of the future Yemeni
state and setting out the means for drafting a new constitution.
Anticipation is high, and the consequences of failure could be dire. The
president himself has warned that the failure of the National Dialogue could
likely lead to Yemen's descent into a civil war.

According to the most optimistic forecasts, the National Dialogue conference
could begin before the end of the year. The dialogue's preparatory committee
has nearly completed its work, and both members and observers have
characterized its deliberations as productive and largely respectful,
despite the historical enmity between many of the factions represented. But
the dialogue's success is far from assured. And while an Arab
Spring-inspired uprising ultimately set into motion the events let lead to
the end of Saleh's time in power, pre-2011 conflicts and power struggles
continue to cast a heavy shadow over the transitional process.

In the south -- an independent country until Yemen's 1990 unification -- the
activists of the <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Yemen_Movement>
Southern Movement, largely suppressed since the group's 2007 emergence, have
come out empowered -- and defiant. Rejecting calls for dialogue, many of
their leaders have instead raised calls for complete disengagement with
Sanaa. It's a viewpoint that is by no means universal among southerners.

But as leaders in the divided grouping jockey for influence, the struggle
for legitimacy has pushed many away from pragmatism. Radical voices have
increasingly come to dominate the conversation. And as Sanaa-based
politicians and international diplomats have strived to fulfill the
transition's ambitious, fast-paced roadmap, southern leaders have stressed
the need for dialogue among themselves -- which many have characterized as a
near prerequisite for any possible involvement in talks on a national level
-- underscoring the challenges of forming a representative body out of
groups that are often far from cohesive themselves.

"It's not possible for any faction in the South to claim that it represents
the south or all southerners," said Ali Nasser Mohamed, a former president
of South Yemen who has yet to commit to entering the National Dialogue,
commenting by email from exile in Cairo. "We hope to emerge from [internal]
southern dialogue with a compromise vision and leadership that can represent
the South in national dialogue."

Then there are also the Houthis, a clan once mired in a devastating, nearly
decade-long conflict with the central government. They have already appeared
to take the upper hand in Yemen's far North, where they have carved out
virtual control in the northern governorate of Saada and parts of
neighboring provinces. In Sanaa, the territory is pejoratively referred to
as a "state within a state;" Houthi leaders have dismissed such claims as
political posturing, stressing that the group has unambiguously agreed to
enter the dialogue process.

But their participation comes amidst a tense climate. Many Yemeni
politicians and foreign diplomats claim the Houthis are working with Iran,
repeating longstanding accusations that the Islamic Republic has provided
arms and funding to the Zaydi Shi'a-led group. For their part, Houthi
leaders have countered by labeling the current government as a reshuffling
of old elites, condemning Hadi for his alliance with the United States, and
stressing that national dialogue will not serve as the panacea that many
seem to hope it will be.

"The [GCC] initiative only allowed a wing of the regime to rule again; the
people do not accept this," said Saleh Habra, the head of the Houthi's
political bureau. "The dialogue comes in this context. Entering into
dialogue isn't a solution."

It's a viewpoint that's shared by many across political and societal lines.
Even if the National Dialogue ends up with the wide-ranging participation
necessary to claim legitimacy, the conference's ability to achieve consensus
-- let alone its ability to do so quickly enough to allow for elections to
take place on schedule -- remains an open question. And while they've
dominated discussions so far, the concerns of the Houthis and the Southern
Movement will join a slate of other issues once the dialogue begins. While
the participation of the GPC and the JMP has long been a given, many fear
that their divisions will taint the dialogue process. And then there's the
role of potential spoilers -- most notably the former president, who has
resided in the capital since returning from medical treatment in the United
States this February.

Beyond these factors, of course, are the deliberations of the conference
itself. Subjects as diverse as women's rights, the extension of apologies
and possible compensation to victims of Saleh-era conflicts, and widely
discussed (though deeply controversial) ideas for changing the structure of
the government to a federal or parliamentary system could very well lead to
the collapse of the dialogue. Getting everyone to the table, while a key
step in the process, is only one of Yemen's worries.

Expectations are high, but a general sense of pessimism is widespread. On a
rhetorical level, the goals of the dialogue -- reckoning with longstanding
issues while paving the way for a break with the past and establishing a
mandate for an accountable, democratic governance system -- have nearly
universal support, whether on the popular level or among Yemen's elite.
However, on a practical level, it remains to be seen whether factions deeply
invested in the status quo will be willing to make the compromises necessary
to make them a reality.

The fears have been focused on the National Dialogue's potential failure,
which could very well plunge Yemen into conflict. But even if the dialogue
succeeds, restoring unity to this notoriously fractious country will still
prove a tall order. Across the country, powerful tribal leaders maintain
their hold over their own fighting forces; even the Yemeni army, many here
complain, are closer to a collection of private militias than it is to a
truly national military. Rather than holding a monopoly on power, the
post-Saleh government often appears to be at the mercy of various factions
whose interests often seem to diverge from those of the nation as a whole.
In some sense, it's a thorny paradox: As the country aims to move forward,
the cooperation of such divergent interest groups is key. But their
continued sway, many argue, could render any progress in Sanaa moot.

"The source of Yemen's problems is clear," says Mujahid al-Kuhali, who
serves as Minister of Expatriate Affairs in the unity government. "The
center of power remains in the hands of certain armed groups controlled by
men... who work for themselves rather than for Yemen. Until this changes,
the problems will not be solved."

 




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