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Ali Salem al Beidh

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President
  
Role
  
Politician

Preceded by
  
Position Created


Religion
  
Islam

Parents
  
Salim al-Beidh

Name
  
Ali al

Resigned
  
May 1994

Ali Salem al Beidh Controversy about AlBeidh39s announced return to Yemen

Prime Minister
  
Haidar Abu Bakr al-AttasMuhammad Said al-Attar

Born
  
February 10, 1939 (age 85) Hadhramaut, Aden Protectorate (
1939-02-10
)

Political party
  
Yemeni Socialist Party, Southern Movement

Similar People
  
Ali Abdullah Saleh, Haidar Abu Bakr al‑Attas, Melhem Zein, Abd Rabbuh Mansur H, Abdul Fattah Ismail

Succeeded by
  
Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi

Ali Salem al Beidh (‘Alī Sālim al-Bīḍ, Arabic: علي سالم البيض‎‎) (born 10 February 1939) is a Yemeni politician who served as the General Secretary of the Yemeni Socialist Party (YSP) in South Yemen and as Vice President of Yemen following the unification in 1990. He left the unification government in 1993, sparking the 1994 civil war in Yemen and then went into exile in Oman. He is a leader of the Southern independence movement known as Al Hirak.

Contents

Ali Salem al Beidh Ali Salim elBeidh Separating South Yemen Al Jazeera

Leadership in South Yemen

Ali Salem al Beidh httpsiytimgcomviKyOhGgtomYcmaxresdefaultjpg

A former Politburo member, al-Beidh took the top position in the YSP following a 12-day 1986 civil war between forces loyal to former chairman Abdul Fattah Ismail and then-chairman Ali Nasir Muhammad. An Ismail ally, he took control after Muhammad's defeat and defection and Ismail's disappearance. In a coup that took the lives of anywhere from 4,000 to 10,000 people, al-Beidh was one of the few high-ranking officials who survived.

Ali Salem al Beidh Southern interview with President Ali Salim alBeidh YouTube

Suffering a loss of more than half its aid from the Soviet Union from 1986 to 1989 and an interest in possible oil reserves on the border between the countries, al-Beidh's government worked toward unification with North Yemen officials.

Unification and Civil War

Ali Salem al Beidh Ali Salem al Beidh Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

Following the unification of South Yemen with the Yemen Arab Republic in 1990, he took up the position of vice-president in the transition government of unified Yemen. But in 1993, al-Beidh quit the government and returned to the former Southern capital of Aden, claiming that the new government was systematically marginalizing the southern people ignoring the needs of the south. On 21 May 1994, as the South's military position weakened, al-Beidh declared the Democratic Republic of Yemen. He served as the only President of the DRY, from 21 May to 7 July 1994. Al-Beidh fled to the neighboring Sultanate of Oman after the secession failed.

South Yemen movement

Ali Salem al Beidh Cabinet endorses bill granting amnesty for Southern leaders Yemen

After fifteen years of living in exile Salim al-Beidh resumed his political career on the eve of the 19th anniversary of the Yemeni unification. This came amid highly escalating tensions in the south, with clashes and violence between protesters and Yemeni security forces. In a televised speech from Germany, the former President called for a return of South Yemen. Since then he has called for several demonstrations to demonstrate the strength of the movement. These have continued into 2011. As a result of his increased involvement, he lost his right to stay in Oman after violating the conditions of his citizenship. Following the 2011 Yemeni uprising, he renewed calls for reinstating South Yemen as a separate country.


Ali Salem al Beidh Memorandum to the UN envoy Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed From President

Ali Salem al Beidh Gargash receives Ali Salem alBeidh

References

Ali Salem al Beidh Wikipedia