Word: saleh
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...over the occupation." Meanwhile, British leader Tony Blair emphasized the need to restart the Middle East peace process, voicing support for George W. Bush's stated goals of Palestinian reform, a viable independent Palestine and a secure Israel. SAUDI ARABIA Security Lapse Saudi Arabia's top security chief General Saleh bin Taha Khosaifan resigned just days after a car bomb killed Maximilian Graf, a 56-year-old German working in the capital, Riyadh. The Saudi intelligence chief Prince Nawwaf blamed the attack on "traders in illegal matters." But Western diplomats suspect that Islamic militants were behind this and previous bombings...
Spurred on by disturbing revelations since the Sept. 11 attacks of Yemen's connections to terrorism, President Ali Abdullah Saleh claims he wants to end the country's fabled history of lawlessness. It was one thing when tribesmen held foreign visitors for ransom; now it's clear world-class terrorists have been using Yemen for major operations and recruitment. "The President is declaring loud and clear: 'No to terrorism,'" says Faris Sanabani, a Saleh adviser and editor of the weekly newspaper Yemen Observer. "No one wants to wake up to the sound of an explosion...
...Saleh governs a poor, mountainous country of 18 million where many adults squander much of the day in the national pastime of chewing a mildly narcotic leaf called kat. According to a recent local study, a typical Yemeni laborer spends three times as much on kat as on food. Saleh would like to make the country more economically productive, but investors are leery of Yemen's frontier culture. After Sept. 11, the government launched a grand sweep against individuals suspected of al-Qaeda links, and it still holds hundreds, according to high-level officials. In his effort to impose order...
...special forces have trained and equipped Yemeni counterparts in the arts of counterterrorism. But last week Yemeni officials felt compelled to loudly deny press reports that the 800 U.S. troops amassed in nearby Djibouti might eventually be deployed in Yemen. Saleh's campaign is popular with many Yemenis, but they draw the line at the presence of foreign troops. At the Wadi Dhahr wedding ceremony, Ahmed Saeed, a retired army officer who carried his 8-month-old grandson on his shoulders, was pleased when the police took away the reveler who had opened fire. "We have the greatest President...
...BOTTOM LINES "Yesterday I died. That's bad news for me, but it's not bad news for you." Warren Buffett, chairman of Berkshire Hathaway, quoting from a letter that will tell shareholders his succession plan after he dies "We have to sell our oil. We cannot drink it." Saleh Mansour Al Rajhy, Saudi ambassador to South Korea, arguing that fears of runaway oil prices are overblown "The average E.U. cow receives more than $2 a day in support from governments. That is more than the income of half the world's population." Julian Filochowski, director of the Catholic Agency...