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Yemeni Vice President Abd-Rabbu
Mansour Hadi met with opposition leaders in Sanaa on Sunday,
trying to reach a power-transfer agreement upon the request
of visiting UN envoy Jamal bin Omar. However, no progress was
made during the talks, government and opposition officials said.
"No progress has been made until this moment, nothing
new," opposition spokesman Mohamed Qahtan told Xinhua.
"We (opposition representatives) have met with representatives
of Saleh's ruling party, including Hadi upon the request of
visiting UN envoy who is running the talks... but no progress
or no compromise was achieved as Saleh still sticks to his
conditions and refuses to transfer power peacefully,"
he added.
On the other hand, an official of Saleh's office told Xinhua
on condition of anonymity that "it seems that no deal
will be inked as long as the opposition refused to make any
concession."
The government official also said that the UN Security Council
postponed a meeting to discuss the implementation of Resolution
2014 which aims to solve the months-long crisis in Yemen.
Bin Omar arrived in Yemen on Nov. 10 to follow up the implementation
of the UN resolution and called on Saleh to sign the Gulf
Cooperation Council initiative to peacefully transfer power
to his deputy Hadi in return for immunity from prosecution.
Saleh has backed out of signing the initiative for three
times in the last minutes since it was brokered in April,
confronting the 10-month-old protests.
Meanwhile, tension is simmering after General Abdulsalam
al- Sufyani of the Republican Guard military base in Arahab
district in northern Sanaa province was killed on Sunday during
clashes with the defected army and dissident armed tribesmen,
a day after Saleh warned his opponents of "harsh and
decisive response if they continue to attack the Republican
Guard forces."
The Defence Ministry accused the defected army and opposition-
led tribal rebels of attacking the Republican Guard military
base and killing the general, which opposition officials refused
to give comment.
In the capital Sanaa, witnesses said that the government,
the defected army and armed tribesmen recently deployed more
forces to the frontline.
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