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![Secessionist sentiments feed regular protests in southern Yemen [File, AFP] Secessionist sentiments feed regular protests in southern Yemen [File, AFP]](http://mwcnews.net/images/stories/Arabworld/arab/2/3/4/5/6/7/Yemen-southern.jpg) | | Secessionist sentiments feed regular protests in southern Yemen [File, AFP] | Up to 12 people have reportedly been killed in Yemen after security forces opened fire on anti-government protesters in the country's south.
Witnesses said that hundreds of security forces opened fire on about 5,000 protesters in the city of Zinjibar in Abyan province on Thursday in an effort to disperse them. Yemen's north and south were separate countries until they united in 1990, only to dissolve into civil war four years later when the south tried unsuccessfully to secede. Secessionist sentiment has been on the rise in the south since then and regular demonstrations by former army members demanding political reforms have heightened tensions between the two sides. A doctor at al-Razi government hospital in Zinjibar said ambulances rushed to the scene and brought back 10 dead civilians and at least 12 injured police. Another doctor at Aden's May 28th hospital said he received eight critically injured civilians, two of whom later died. Violence Ali Dehmes, an opposition member in the south, said that government forces "fired live bullets" and "have committed a massacre against unarmed civilians". But Ahmed al-Maysari, the governor of Abyan province, denied that security forces had fired on the protesters and said that only eight civilians were killed when the demonstrators started shooting. The Yemeni government issued a statement expressing regret about "the killing, sabotaging, and hostilities perpetrated by outlawed" individuals in Abyan. Witnesses said armed men from two cities to the north and east of Zinjibar clashed with security forces who prevented them from participating in Thursday's protest by cutting off roads heading to the provincial capital. Some people participating the demonstration in Zinjibar called for a revolution in the south, while others complained about deteriorating services, including scarce water and frequent power outages. One witness said that plainclothes security agents used batons to beat up protesters and drag them across the ground into waiting police trucks. Saleh el-Shamsi, the province's deputy governor, said that the police now have the situation under control.
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Tags: Yemen
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