Almotamar.net - Yemen cabinet on Tuesday set up a large ministerial committee composed of different ministries chaired by the Minister of Local Administration Abdulqader Hillal to make field visits to the areas that came under damage in the governorate of Saada. In its meeting on Tuesday, presided over by Premier Dr Ali Mohammed Mujawar, the cabinet highly evaluated the responsible and national decision of President Ali Abdullah Saleh of ending the war that happened in some districts of Saada, considering it as representing national and humanitarian importance for prevention of bloodshed.
The cabinet considered the decision as a way for providing the way for the return of security and peace those areas and enabling inhabitants who left their homes to return as well as to resume the process of development in the governorate in various fields.
The cabinet also praised the heroic role of the armed forces and security and the citizens in repelling the terrorist elements. Those elements that aimed against Yemen's security and stability and to stop the developmental activity in Saada governorate.
In 2007 the opposition Yemen Congregation for Reform (Islah) Islamic oriented Party maintained its having political and media sway over the Joint meeting Parties (JMP) block, also consisting of Yemen Socialist Party and the Nasserite Unionist Organisation.
Yemen is practically a cool green paradise, with crisp mountain air, enormous acacia trees, pristine coral reefs and verdant fields bursting with khat, a psychoactive plant that induces mild euphoria.
Sana'a: Yemen will not be able to combat terror without regional and international cooperation, said a Yemeni official, who warned of the ramifications of letting Yemen fight terrorism alone.
Doctors use the word “crisis” to describe the point at which a patient either starts to recover or dies. President George W. Bush’s Iraqi patient now seems to have reached that point. Most commentators appear to think that Bush’s latest prescription – a surge of 20,000 additional troops to suppress the militias in Baghdad – will, at best, merely postpone the inevitable death of his dream of a democratic Iraq. Yet as “Battle of Baghdad” begins, factors beyond Bush’s control and not of his making (at least not intentionally) may just save Iraq from its doom.