6 Dead in Fierce Gunbattle after Saleh Refuses to Ink Yemen Deal

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Six people were killed and dozens wounded during armed clashes in Sanaa on Monday between police and supporters of powerful opposition tribal chief Sadiq al-Ahmar, tribal sources and state media said.

The clashes came a day after President Ali Abdullah Saleh refused to ink an accord brokered by the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) under which he would cede power within 30 days in exchange for immunity from prosecution for himself and his aides.

Five supporters of Sheikh Sadiq al-Ahmar were killed and 35 others wounded during clashes with police, the sheikh's office said in a statement, updating an earlier toll from medical officials.

The defense ministry's 26sep.net news website, meanwhile, said that one citizen was killed and two wounded by gunfire from Ahmar supporters.

The official Saba news agency, citing an interior ministry official, said Ahmar supporters "opened fire on and assaulted Al-Rumah school in al-Hasaba neighborhood" and Saba's headquarters.

And Al-Yemen state TV said more than 200 journalists were trapped inside the Saba building, including two who were wounded.

A Yemeni official, speaking on condition of anonymity, also told Agence France Presse that Ahmar loyalists had taken over the trade and industry ministry.

Witnesses had said earlier that machine guns were fired and grenades thrown during fighting between police and tribesmen near Ahmar's home in Sanaa.

Sources close to Ahmar said the fighting erupted after security forces tried to deploy around the tribal leader's residence and that loyalist gunmen had retaliated.

The fighting had wound down by Monday evening, AFP reported.

Ahmar, who heads the Hashid tribal federation, the largest in deeply tribal Yemen and a former crucial source of Saleh's power, in March pledged his support for the opposition.

Yemen's opposition vowed earlier on Monday to step up street protests, while insisting on efforts to avoid violence.

"Our only option is to intensify the peaceful revolt and continue to choke the regime, then finish it," said Mohammed al-Qahtan, a spokesman for the Common Forum coalition of parliamentary opposition parties.

"The regime is trying to push the situation toward violence, but it will not push the country into war," he said.

Saleh on Sunday explicitly warned of civil war as he refused to sign the transition plan brokered by impoverished Yemen's oil-rich Arab neighbors in the Gulf.

"If they remain stubborn, we will confront them everywhere with all possible means," Saleh said.

"If they don't bow, and want to take the country into a civil war, let them be responsible for it and for the blood that was shed and that will be shed if they insist on their stupidity."

But youth leader Wassim al-Qershi vowed the anti-Saleh protest movement would remain peaceful.

"The president thinks that the only solution is to provoke a civil war between rival units of the army," Qershi said. "We want to preserve the peaceful nature of our movement."

The GCC has said it was suspending its mediation efforts, while U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton accused Saleh of "turning his back on his commitments and disregarding the legitimate aspirations of the Yemeni people."

The European Union said it would review its policies towards Yemen and the French foreign ministry branded Saleh "irresponsible" for refusing to sign the GCC deal and warned of "consequences."

State television aired footage of Saleh standing next to Zayani and U.S. ambassador Gerald Michael Feierstein, as members of his ruling party, the General People's Congress, signed the deal on Sunday, a day after the opposition.

But the president insisted the opposition come to his palace for the ceremony.

Since late January, security forces and armed Saleh supporters have mounted a bloody crackdown on protests demanding his ouster, killing at least 181 people, according to a toll compiled from reports by activists and medics.

Under the terms of the GCC plan, Saleh would hand power to the vice president 30 days after it is signed, and he and his aides would be granted immunity from prosecution by parliament.

A national unity government led by a prime minister from the opposition would be formed, and a presidential election would follow 60 days after Saleh's departure.

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