Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
New 'parallel revolution' against corruption
New 'parallel revolution' against corruption
Nov 8, 2025 6:53 AM

  As the year of revolution draws to a close, a new "parallel revolution" against corruption is emerging in Yemen. Over the past two weeks strikes have spread across the country and are proving effective, leading to the hope that this Yemeni uprising of 2011 can truly bring change to the Arab world’s poorest country. The chant of "Irhal, Irhal" - "Leave, Leave" - is now being directed at corrupt figures of authority throughout the country.

  Unlike some of the other Arab revolutions, especially the Libyan and Syrian ones, the Yemeni revolution was mainly not one of the politically oppressed, but the economically oppressed. The extent of the atmospheric levels of corruption can be seen in the places where protests and strikes have been called. One of the first strikes was by Yemenia Airways workers; the airline, practically bankrupt, has been destroyed by corruption. Flights were stopped at Yemen's main airports and after two days the new Yemeni government removed the director, President Saleh's son-in-law.

  After this, the floodgates opened. Military soldiers, traffic officers, government workers and police officers have all protested. They have not allowed corrupt bosses to enter their offices, and many of these figures, not used to such insubordination, fled.

  Perhaps the most important demonstration, and the one that indicates that Saleh's powerbase is being seriously eroded, has been at the Yemeni Armed Forces Military Guidance Office, the publishers of the influential army newspaper. The soldiers called for their notoriously corrupt head, General Ali Hassan al-Shater, a key Saleh ally and adviser, to be removed from his position. There have been reports that al-Shater even kept a personal prison to punish officers and soldiers. The protesters managed to gain control of the 26 September newspaper, and published a damning editorial criticizing al-Shater. The Defense Minister has now announced that General al-Shater will be replaced. This is a very important development that has inspired others around the country, implying that no one is untouchable anymore.

  The Saleh clique are fearful, with the strikes possibly threatening their military powerbase more than 10 months of protest have. Ahmed Saleh, the President’s son and commander of the elite Republican Guard, has reportedly warned his troops that internal protests would not be tolerated. A Yemeni official told the Associated Press that Ahmed Saleh threatened his soldiers, "We will not permit copying here. Force will be the way to deal with any protest," he told them. In reality, Ahmed Saleh is not in a good position, and it seems increasingly likely that his authority is slipping away.

  The protests and strikes have come in a period where revolutionary forces, especially the independent youth, are trying to re-assert their power over the revolution. The 250-km "Life March" from Taiz to Sana'a was an example of this new assertiveness. The "Life March" was an organic protest, under the direction of the youth, and not a ploy by the JMP opposition coalition, as Saleh's GPC party claimed.

  The independent youth themselves, a great number of whom are students, have been taking part in the recent demonstrations themselves. Having recently returned to study after almost a year off, many students have used the opportunity to protest against "corrupt" lecturers. The most famous of these protests was at Sana'a University, where students demanded that Dr Muhammad al-Iryani, a Professor of Business, leave. He is well-known for his especially harsh grading of students, resulting in many of them failing his courses. Gathering in the lecture hall, the students chanted at a bewildered looking Iryani, vowing "No Iryani after today".

  The overall strike and protest movement has surprised many, with analysts expecting that the next phase in Yemen would be civil war. That may still happen, but it does seemingly look further off. The strikes have unified Yemenis, with corruption cited as the main problem in the country by people who were for and against the revolution alike.

  It was also unlikely that people who have protested for so long against dictatorship would suddenly go back to work and accept their own "mini-dictators" in the workplace. These mini-dictators were known for stealing large sums of public money, threatening subordinates, and generally perceiving themselves to be above the law. Those with links to Saleh are not protected by him anymore. With the new spirit of "change" that is seeping through Yemen, it seems that the old way of doing things may be over. Changing the culture of corruption will take a long time, but it is clear that the process has started.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Yemenis rally in the southern port city of Aden in April, 2011.

  By Abubakr Al-Shamahi

  Source: Aljazeera.com

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Fallujah fallout: More than 700 Sunni men 'missing'
  Shia militias in Iraq detained, tortured and abused far more Sunni civilians during the American-backed capture of the town of Fallujah in June than US officials have publicly acknowledged.   More than 700 Sunni men and boys are still missing more than two months after ISIL stronghold fell.   The abuses occurred...
Iraq humanitarian crisis 'one of the world's worst'
  More than 10 million Iraqis are in need of immediate humanitarian aid, according to UN estimates.   Iraqi civilians and officials have voiced concern over the humanitarian situation in the country's western cities of Fallujah and Ramadi.   For almost two years now, Fallujah has endured a siege imposed on the city...
In east Aleppo 'there is no way out'
  Although residents of besieged east Aleppo have been told to leave immediately, they have no safe way of doing so.   Syrian regime forces sent a text message to residents of east Aleppo on Sunday, demanding they leave the opposition-controlled area within 24 hours or risk their lives during a major...
Syrian regime forces hit hospitals in Aleppo's 'worst week': rights group
  Syrian regime forces launched air strikes against six hospitals in the Aleppo area within a week in attacks that amounted to war crimes, a U.S.-based rights group said on Wednesday.   Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) said it was the worst week for attacks on medical facilities in the Aleppo region...
UN: Civilians fleeing Fallujah face extreme abuse
  The UN human rights chief has said there are "extremely distressing, credible reports" that Iraqis fleeing the fighting in Fallujah are facing extreme abuse and even death at the hands of Shia armed groups allied with the government troops.   Zeid Ra'ad al Hussein, citing witness testimonies, said on Tuesday that...
Almost 18,000 died in Syria's prisons: Amnesty
  Almost 18,000 Syrians have died in regime jails since 2011, with authorities using torture, beatings, electric shocks and rape against prisoners on a "massive scale," a rights groups has said.   The UK-based Amnesty International said an average of 300 detainees were dying every month in a report on Thursday that...
Syria: More than 500 civilians killed in one week
  More than 500 Syrian civilians have been killed in a single week, mostly in regime and Russian air raids and shelling, across several cities in the war-torn country.   Casualty figures released on Saturday by the Local Coordination Committees (LCC), a grassroots network of activists in Syria, recorded 508 civilians killed...
Israel's Muezzin Bill seeks 'Judaisation of Jerusalem'
  Palestinian politicians in Israel have found an unexpected ally inside the government against a new bill banning mosques from using loudspeakers to broadcast the call to prayer.   The so-called Muezzin Bill - named after the person who calls Muslims to prayer - was approved by a ministerial committee on Sunday,...
'Syrian regime's policy of terror targets aid groups'
  With Syria's war entering its sixth year, hundreds of civilians are being killed weekly and at least 1.9 million continue to live under siege, lacking access to life-saving humanitarian aid. Few international aid agencies have been allowed to deliver relief supplies or to work within the country; those that have,...
Hunger and desperation: Aleppo siege tests limits of endurance
  As Syria's regime presses a fierce assault on eastern Aleppo, its siege is making life ever harder for civilians who are being forced to sift through garbage for food and scavenge firewood from bombed-out buildings.   With winter setting in, shortages of food, medicine and fuel coupled with intense air strikes...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved