Fighting
erupts across Yemen
by Brian Whitaker
Originally published in The Guardian, 6 May
1994
YEMEN was at war yesterday as forces controlled by the feuding
president and vice-president fought each other throughout the country. All the main
airports came under attack, as well as economic and military targets.
In Sana'a, the northern Yemeni capital, explosions were
heard as jets from the south roared over the city. Large parts of the region were without
electricity as aircraft controlled by Vice-President Ali Salem al-Baidh's southern-based
Socialist Party attacked the two main power stations.
For much of yesterday all telephone contact with Yemen -
north and south - was lost.
In Sana'a, President Ali Abdullah Salih, the northern
leader, declared a state of emergency, and France said it was evacuating its own and any
European Union nationals from Aden.
Later, parliament met and formally dismissed the
vice-president, though no one expects him to take any notice.
Sana'a radio, describing Mr al-Baidh as a traitor, accused
him of leading Yemen to war by threatening to end the four-year marriage between the
tribalist north and the formerly Marxist south.
During Wednesday night, aircraft controlled by the
socialists attacked northern airports in Ta'izz, Hodeida and Sana'a. Yesterday, north
Yemen's military command was reported as saying it had shot down five of the southern
jets, but the claim was unconfirmed.
An official from the southern command in Aden said the
attacks had been carried out to paralyse the airports.
Witnesses said a rocket exploded yards from a Jordanian
airliner about to take off from Sana'a airport. Two military aircraft were destroyed and
the control tower damaged. The runway was said to be operational, although the airport
remained closed.
Northern military aircraft went into action at around 5am.
However, by then southern aircraft had attacked oil and pipeline facilities at Marib and
Hodeida port. The attacks were apparently aimed at cutting the north's fuel supplies.
The northern command reported pitched battles along the
former border between north and south.
Meanwhile, the south's main airport, in Aden, was badly
damaged by northern forces. The south claimed planes also hit a power station, port, oil
refinery and television station. The southern airline, Alyemda, had flown its entire fleet
to Saudi Arabia the previous day.
The vice-president had also left his Aden headquarters,
reported to be under attack. But southern sources claimed the attackers were surrendering.
A Foreign Office spokesman said no evacuation of the 800
Britons in Yemen was planned. A ship from Djibouti is expected in Aden today to pick up
French citizens. In Washington, the state department advised American citizens to leave
Yemen.
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