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      South vs. North:  Yemen Teeters between Hope 
	and Division 
  By Ramzy Baroud 
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN,  October 18, 2013 
	   On Oct 12, tens of thousands of Yemenis took to the streets of 
	Eden in the South of the country, mostly demanding secession from the north. 
	The date is significant, for it marks the 1967 independence of South Yemen, 
	ending several decades of British colonialism. But for nearly five decades 
	since then, Yemen is yet to find political stability, a semblance of 
	economic prosperity, and, most importantly, settle the question of its 
	national identity.   It has been two years and nine months since a 
	large protest has occurred in the Yemeni capital. Sana’a initiated what was 
	quickly named the Yemeni revolution and ignited media frenzy that Yemen had 
	officially joined the so-called Arab Spring. Seeing Yemen as a member of the 
	‘Arab Spring’ club, as opposed to appreciating the Arab country’s own unique 
	historical and political circumstances, was a media shortcut that failed to 
	explain the vast majority of events that followed the Yemeni youth early 
	protests on Jan 27, 2011.   One of the most significant dates of the 
	massive protests against the 33-year role of now deposed President Ali 
	Abdullah Saleh and his family’s strong hold over state institutions was Feb 
	3rd. It was then that both Sana’a and Eden stood united under one banner. It 
	was a momentous day because both cities once served as capitals of two 
	warring countries. The youth of Yemen were able to fleetingly bridge a gap 
	that neither politicians nor army generals managed to close despite several 
	agreements and years of bloody conflicts. But that collective triumph of the 
	Yemeni people was only felt on the streets of the country, overwhelmed by 
	poverty and destitution, but also compelled by hope. That sentiment was 
	never truly translated to a clear political victory, even after Saleh was 
	deposed in Feb 2012.   Since then a National Dialogue Conference (NDC) 
	was convened with representations from various political parties, major 
	tribes, youth movements and delegates representing South and North. Its job 
	was to usher in the process of drafting a constitution by organizing a 
	referendum and general elections. Sep 18, 2013 was recognized as a deadline 
	for these major tasks to be accomplished, but that date slipped away. Even 
	worse, deep divisions began showing between all parties involved. Initially, 
	the dialogue attempted to explore commonalities between delegates 
	representing the ruling General People’s Congress (GPC) and the Joint 
	Meeting Parties (JMP), representing the opposition. However, conflict soon 
	ensued between members of the JMP themselves.   JMP is made of several 
	opposition parties, including the Islamic-leaning Yemeni Congregation for 
	Reform (Islah) whose core supporters are based in the North, and the 
	secularist Yemeni Socialist Party (YSP), based in the South. These two 
	parties hail from entirely different ideological schools of thought, and 
	were not always united by their wish to defeat Saleh’s ruling GPC. There was 
	a time in which the Islah, seen as Yemen’s branch of the Muslim Brotherhood, 
	allied with Saleh to defeat socialists. “The socialist expansion emanating 
	from the South bolstered the Brotherhood’s alliance with Saleh’s regime 
	during the wars for the central regions (1978-1982) against what they called 
	the communist tide,” wrote Farea al-Muslimi for Al-Monitor.   In those 
	years, today’s Republic of Yemen was two different countries: a 
	Marxist-Leninist South Yemen, and North Yemen. After years of conflict in 
	which both sides were used to channel regional rivalries and an 
	international Cold War, they became united on May 22, 1990. Soon after the 
	union, a process of democratization, elections, wealth sharing and more was 
	initiated, but quickly fell apart. Southern leaders began speaking of a 
	conspiracy to deprive their less populated, yet wealthier southern and 
	eastern parts of the country of its resources by the tribal-dominated North. 
	In 1994, political conflict quickly descended into civil war where the South 
	was defeated and thousands of its leaders and military men fled. Efforts at 
	reconciliation fell short. The sense of injustice that southerners continue 
	to feel towards the dominant North is a notion that is challenged by many. 
	But it is real and has never been seriously discussed, let alone resolved 
	through a transparent political medium overseen by a democratic leadership. 
	  The current Yemeni Socialist Party is composed by remnants of the 
	dissolved leadership of South Yemen. Although the Yemeni revolt of Jan 2011 
	ignited much national fervor throughout the country, talks of succession 
	began resurfacing later on, when Yemenis, especially in the South, began 
	losing faith in the political transition and the National Dialogue 
	Conference. Another contributing factor is the state of utter security chaos 
	experienced throughout Yemen, some of which is al-Qaeda-lead or inspired 
	violence, much of which targets southern towns and activists. Some in the 
	South accuse Sana’a of facilitating or allowing such violence to perpetuate 
	to achieve political ends.   Moreover JMP, which was slated as the 
	united front of the opposition, became a major source of tension, for the 
	socialists deeply mistrust the Islah, and the latter, which strongly objects 
	to any division of the country, is equally suspicious of its supposed 
	political ally. When the Egyptian military overthrew President Mohammed 
	Morsi, Islah’s supporters protested in fury, while the socialists celebrated 
	with utter delight. Trust, indeed, was at an all-time low.   Not that 
	the South is united, for the Southern Movement Hiraak, which advocates a 
	two-state federalism followed by a referendum on the future of the South, is 
	marred by division. Hiraak is composed of many political parties and 
	factions and is torn by competing leaderships. That division was displayed 
	on Oct 12 during the marking of South Yemen’s independence. Some 
	participating factions carried pictures of Egyptian military general Abdul 
	Fatah al-Sisi, who overthrew Morsi, while others waved flags of Lebanon’s 
	Hezbollah. The political divide soon erupted in bloody clashes in Parade 
	Square, in central Eden, where some were reportedly injured.   On Oct 
	8, only a few days prior to the Eden rallies, President Abd Rabbuh Mansur 
	Hadi, who was installed following the ouster of Saleh, declared the 
	country’s national dialogue was about to bear a long anticipated result. In 
	fact, it was only “a few days away” from establishing a “united and federal 
	Yemen”, a language so carefully used as to sway both sides of the divide. 
	But his anticipated breakthrough seemed irrelevant in the face of 
	compellingly discouraging facts, lead amongst them is that factions 
	affiliated with the Southern Movement are boycotting the talks. Also, the 
	signing of any accords “has been put off as the two representatives of 
	Saleh’s General People’s Congress walked out and the GPC suspended its 
	participation, rejecting any bid to ‘harm the unity of the homeland,’” 
	reported Arab News.   Even if such an accord is ever signed, the 
	National Dialogue Conference cannot enforce any agreement that lacks a clear 
	mandate and popular approval. Uniting a ‘homeland’ around similar ideas as a 
	rebellion continues to brew in the North, a secessionist movement gathers 
	steam in the South, an unending US drone war carries on, rampant militancy 
	moves ahead, and punishing poverty thrives throughout the country, is no 
	easy task. We must ask if under these circumstances, it is even possible at 
	all.   - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is: My Father was A Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press). 
	  
       
       
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