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DEMOCRACY
Arab League seeks Beijing, Moscow support on Syria
by Staff Writers
Cairo (AFP) Jan 29, 2012

Russian ex-paras' rock video labels Putin a 'tyrant'
Moscow (AFP) Jan 29, 2012 - A rock band made up of Russian former paratroopers has scored a surprise hit with a song that labels Vladimir Putin a "tyrant", registering half a million hits on YouTube.

Beefy, tattooed, wearing berets and military decorations on their chests, two singers and three back-up musicians let rip at Putin, the prime minister who is seeking to return to the presidency term in March 4 elections.

"You've destroyed the military, the army is broken and you've spat on the soldiers and sent the officers packing," they sing.

"We're asking you nicely: Go, tyrant!"

Belting out the chorus, they sing: "We are free paratroopers and the Motherland is with us! You're just a public servant, not a tsar or God."

By Sunday the video had been watched 445,000 times since being posted on at www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=2aVlR_Oe3v0 on Thursday.

It has also been watched 150,000 times on the Dojd television station's posting at www.youtube.com/watch?v=dV-prXX1ZOw&feature=related.

One of the singers, asked by a journalist why he opposes the former KGB agent Putin, said that he does not support his corrupt regime.

"We are like all the people, we don't want to live in a country where one flies around and one lies," he said, explaining the song.

Its title "Nobody but us!" is the motto of Russia's paratroopers.

The paratroopers, an elite airborne military force with about 30,000 members, have had a reputation since Soviet times of being fearsome fighters.

Putin, a former agent with Soviet-era KGB intelligence service and a black belt Judoka, has for years cultivated a macho image.


Arab League chief Nabil al-Arabi is fighting an uphill battle to court Russia and China to win their support at the United Nations for the latest Arab plan aimed at ending the bloodshed in Syria.

Russia has made it clear that regime change in Damascus constitutes a "red line," but Arabi said on Sunday as he left for New York that his organisation was in talks with Moscow and Beijing.

He hoped the two veto-wielding countries would change their stand on a draft resolution under discussion at the UN Security Council, based on an Arab proposal for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to hand over power to his deputy.

The Arab League chief, accompanied by Qatar Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassem Al-Thani, is to present details of the plan to the council on Tuesday.

Qatar says the plan foresees the "peaceful departure" of the Syrian regime.

It also calls for an end to the violence and a power transfer, with Assad handing over responsibilities to his deputy, before the launch of negotiations between the government and the opposition.

The Syrian authorities have flatly rejected this formula.

And Moscow, which along with Beijing represents one of Damascus's staunchest allies, remains hostile to the Arab proposition, saying it crosses its clearly drawn lines.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Sunday also slammed the Arab League's decision to suspend its hard-won monitoring mission in Syria.

The Arab League suspended its observer mission the previous day saying it took the decision in response to an "upsurge of violence whose victims are innocent civilians."

Russia and China vetoed a previous European-backed draft resolution at the Security Council last October that would have condemned Damascus, accusing the West of seeking regime change.

The League's decision to turn to the Security Council, experts say, aims to step up the pressure on Assad's regime but it is not likely to put a stop to the violence.

"A UN resolution will only put added pressure on the Syrian regime but it is not a solution in itself," said Nevin Mossaad, a political science professor at the University of Cairo.

"There can be no solutions imposed from the outside on Syria, especially because Western powers do not want to intervene militarily in this country," she said.

"The solution will come from the inside but it will take time because the regime is still strong. It has the support of Alawites (a Shiite sect to which Assad belongs) and (minority) Christians who fear what comes after Assad.

"For the moment, there are many people in Syria who still hesitate to let go of the regime, because they fear that they will pay for it dearly, but the regime will eventually weaken and crumble."

An Arab diplomat, familiar with negotiations on the Syria crisis, told AFP that he was convinced that "a lot of blood will still be spilled in Syria before the fall of the regime."

"Even the opposition knows it," he said.

Arabi himself warned of the risks of civil war in Syria.

"The report by the Arab observer mission shows an excessive use of violence by the Syrian security forces, which has led protesters and the opposition to carry weapons, and this could spark a civil war," he said.

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Yemeni elite troops open fire as soldiers protest
Sanaa (AFP) Jan 29, 2012 - Troops at the headquarters of Yemen's elite Republican Guard opened fire on Sunday at a protest by soldiers demanding the ouster of their brigade chief over corruption charges, a military source said.

Soldiers from the fourth brigade of the Republican Guard were demanding the removal of Abdulmalik al-Arar and another top officer named Abdullah al-Hamiya, the source said, adding that no casualties were reported in the shooting.

The protest follows similar moves by soldiers and police in other areas of the military demanding change since embattled President Ali Abdullah Saleh quit the country last week after handing power to his deputy.

The Republican Guard is led by Saleh's son, Ahmed, one of several relatives who control Yemen's main security and military bodies.

On Saturday, hundreds of air force personnel in Sanaa and Taez demanded the ouster of air force commander Mohammed Saleh al-Ahmar, a half-brother of Saleh.

After months of protests, the veteran Saleh finally signed in November a deal under which he agreed to transfer his powers to his deputy Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi.

He also received blanket immunity against prosecution from parliament, as protesters on the streets insisted that he face trial.

Anti-corruption strikes have spread across several military and government departments in the impoverished country where the economy is on the brink of collapse after a year of protests.

Since Saleh took office in 1978, he has carefully chosen members of his regime, appointing relatives to head the military and security apparatus.

In addition to his son and half brother, Saleh's nephew Yehya commands the central security services and Tariq, another nephew, controls the presidential guard.



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DEMOCRACY
Yemeni troops, police demand bosses' ouster
Sanaa (AFP) Jan 28, 2012
Yemeni soldiers and policemen staged separate demonstrations on Saturday demanding the ouster of top bosses over accusations of corruption, an AFP correspondent reported. Hundreds of officers and soldiers at an air base in the capital staged a sit-in, in a series of protests that began on Monday demanding the sacking of air force commander General Mohammed Saleh al-Ahmar, half-brother of emb ... read more


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