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The
Death and Life of Jarallah Omar
Sheila Carapico,
Lisa Wedeen and Anna Wuerth
(Sheila
Carapico teaches political science at the University of Richmond.
Lisa Wedeen teaches political science at the University of Chicago.
Anna Wuerth is currently a visiting professor at the University of
Richmond.)
December 31,
2002
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Further Info
For
background on the Cole bombing and US-Yemeni relations, see MERIP Press
Information Note 35, Yemen and the Aden-Abyan Islamic
Army.
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2003 issue of Middle East Report will focus on dissent and
opposition in the Arab world, amidst the twin crises of the
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News of the
shooting deaths of three American health professionals working for a
Southern Baptist mission hospital in Yemen follows closely on the
heels of the very public murder of a highly regarded figure in the
Yemeni opposition.
Jarallah Omar,
deputy secretary general of the Yemeni Socialist Party, was
assassinated December 28, 2002, minutes after delivering a
conciliatory speech to the Yemeni Congregation for Reform, known as
al-Tajammu` al-Yemeni lil-Islah or simply Islah.
Initially, some
Yemenis speculated that Omar's murder could portend violence in
advance of parliamentary elections scheduled for April 2003, while
others assumed the shooting of a well-known secular politician was
connected to a string of al-Qaeda terrorist attacks in Yemen. Not
surprisingly, Yemeni government sources say that the man arrested
for the killings of the three Americans, Abed Abd al-Razzaq Kamel,
plotted his attack in tandem with Jarallah Omar's
assassination.
PUBLIC
CRIME, PUBLIC CONFESSION
Omar, a
prominent progressive intellectual and nationalist opposition
leader, was shot in the heart just before noon on December 28, after
addressing an audience of several thousand at a closed convention at
the Islah party headquarters in Sanaa, Yemen's capital. Omar had
helped to create an opposition coalition of the socialist left and
the conservative Islamist-leaning Islah against the ruling party of
President Ali Abdallah Salih in the upcoming elections, and for
peaceful resolution of the nation's troubles. The opposition hoped
to win seats in the 301-member parliament with a platform calling
for fair, free, rule-bound contested elections; policies to
alleviate Yemen's acute problems with public security, increasing
poverty, dire water shortages and inadequate services; and a rule of
law plank calling for the eradication of corruption, the protection
of human rights and rights of free expression.
The accused
gunman, Ali Ahmad Muhammad Jarallah, approached Omar at close range
and fired several shots. Two bullets fatally wounded Omar, who died
en route to the hospital. Bystander Said Shamsan, of Islah, was also
injured. The assailant, Ali Ahmad Jarallah, was apprehended on the
spot and taken to the nearby home of Sheikh Abdallah al-Ahmar, the
speaker of Parliament and an Islah party leader. There, in the
presence of security officers, and on videotape, he was interrogated
by 16 representatives of Yemen's various political parties. In the
afternoon, the assailant was transferred to the Criminal
Investigation Department, and by the evening was finally handed over
to public prosecutors. By permitting this irregular procedure, the
government apparently intended to make his uncoerced confession a
matter of public record.
Circumstantial
evidence linked the suspect to both the radical fringe of the
Islamist movement and the government. Now in his late twenties, Ali
Jarallah was reportedly registered in the mid-1990s at the private,
ultra-conservative al-Iman University, recently accused by the
government of links to al-Qaeda. He was currently serving in the
Yemeni military and told interviewers he had fought on the Salih
government's side against the socialist leadership of the former
South Yemen during the 1994 civil war, in accordance with a fatwa
(religious-legal ruling) issued at the time by Islah ideologue Abd
al-Wahhab al-Dailami that justified the killing of Southern
secessionists. The southern People's Democratic Republic of Yemen
(PDRY) and North Yemen unified their systems in 1990, but
negotiations over the details of unity broke down in 1994. Supported
by Islah, troops under Salih's command defeated the remnants of the
PDRY army and its socialist leadership in 1994.
UNCERTAIN AFFILIATIONS
Although the
accused killer publicly denied any partisan affiliation, the
Ministry of Interior told the Yemeni news agency Saba that he was an
Islahi activist who was detained for anti-government agitation
through a popular mosque in 2001 by Political Security and released
last year after party supporters interceded on his behalf. Other
reports claimed the assailant belonged to the General People's
Congress, headed by President Salih. Journalist Ahmad al-Sufi, who
was interviewed on al-Jazeera after witnessing the interrogation,
suggested that the killer had not been operating alone, and may have
had connections to government agencies.
The prosecution
also interrogated Muhammad Abdallah al-Yadumi, secretary general of
the Islah party, who, according to al-Jazeera television, had
refused a Ministry of Interior offer of police protection for the
annual Islah party conference on the grounds that the party could
provide its own security. Yemeni reporters questioned how the
assassin entered the conference, armed, without an invitation, and
seated himself in the second row usually reserved for dignitaries.
Denying any complicity with the assassin, Islah issued a statement
threatening to sue the government for slander. The party also issued
a statement calling Jarallah Omar "a martyr for
democracy."
According to
excerpts from the videotape of the preliminary interrogation
published in al-Ayyam, the accused assassin admitted planning to
kill other prominent secular opposition figures, including some
present at the Islah convention, in particular the leader of the
Nasserist Union Party, Abd al-Malik al-Mikhlafi, and the Baathist
leader Qasim Salam. He also said he aimed to "teach a lesson to
Islah," presumably about the mainstream religious party's
cooperation with the socialist enemy. He declined to implicate any
associates.
A group calling
itself "Kata'ib Abu Ali al-Harithi -- The Military Wing," known to
be associated with Osama bin Laden, issued a statement on December
29 to commemorate the killing of Qa'id Sinan al-Harithi and four
others by a CIA Predator drone in early November. The statement
accused the "infidel" Yemeni regime of allying itself with the
United States and Zionism against the Islamic world under the
pretext of an anti-terror campaign. In defiance of fatwas issued by
Yemeni ulama (religious scholars), the statement continued, Salih
had sold out to the US. Moreover, his regime had detained and
persecuted "hundreds of young men, lingering in the prisons of
Political Security, some of them for years." The group swore revenge
for al-Harithi and others assassinated by the government, like Samir
al-Hada and Mujalli al-Arhabi, the latter, as they claimed, being a
chief negotiator between the government and the Islamists. The
statement warned: "We can, as you know, get at you any time, and as
we have children and relatives, so you do too."
JARALLAH OMAR, REBEL AND POLITICIAN
Once a
guerrilla fighter, Jarallah Omar became a prominent pro-democracy
activist and an early advocate of Yemeni unity who had the potential
to lead a national opposition coalition. His life dramatized some of
the classic fault lines in Yemeni politics and spoke to key events
in contemporary Yemeni history. He was a Northerner but also a
Southerner, a student of religion and of revolution. Born in the
village of Kuhal in the Northern province of Ibb in 1942, he studied
Islamic jurisprudence in Dhamar as an adolescent. Like many upwardly
mobile male youths of his generation, he then trained as an officer
in Sanaa.
During the
North Yemeni civil war of 1962-1968, Omar became radicalized.
Imprisoned in 1968 for leftist politics and educated there by fellow
inmates and by authors such as Karl Marx and Antonio Gramsci, Omar
left prison in 1971 to become an adversary of conventional politics.
He led the commando forces of the National Defense Forces in the
North, a conglomerate of five separate groups dedicated to
overthrowing the military government in Sanaa. This campaign
continued after Ali Abdallah Salih came to power in 1979 following
the assassination of two predecessors in 1977 and 1978. Defeated by
Salih in the 1980s, Jarallah Omar escaped with many other Northern
socialists to South Yemen, where Marxists were in power.
Subsequently,
as a member of the politburo intimately involved in the bloody
battles for control of the Socialist Party in the South in 1986,
Omar sided with the victorious faction around Abd al-Fattah Ismail
and Ali Salim al-Bid. He later argued that the intense regional and
ideological struggle for control of the party turned so deadly
because of party norms and constraints that made the airing of
grievances in public prohibitive. His assessment of the devastating
effects of undemocratic practices within the party led him to call
for increased "pluralism" as well as North-South reconciliation.
"January 1986 was a turning point," Omar later recalled. "Why combat
the North, when reforms were needed in the party itself?"
Credited as a
force for Yemeni unification in 1990, Jarallah Omar served briefly
as Minister of Culture in one of the post-unification governments,
but resigned as partisan differences threatened the unity accords.
Opposing both war and secession, he was forced to flee Yemen during
the brief civil war of 1994 only to return a year later. Since then
he has continued to play a vibrantly contentious role in Yemeni
political life, speaking out against injustice and hosting debate
sessions in his home. He became widely known as a liberal democrat
devoted to the electoral process and respect for human
rights.
Omar became
Assistant Secretary General of the Yemeni Socialist Party in 2001,
and pushed for reform within the party even as it prepared for
parliamentary elections. He was a key broker of 2002 alliance
between the YSP and Islah, Yemen's main Islamist party. A popular
politician prominent in a strengthened opposition, he was
challenging hard-liners in his own party as well as Islah's radical
right wing, while making the ruling General People's Congress
uneasy, too.
UNSOLVED MURDER
It may never be
known with certainty whether Ali Ahmad Muhammad Jarallah acted alone
in killing Jarallah Omar -- or, if he acted on behalf of
co-conspirators, who they were. Few Arab leaders would tolerate a
former rebel commander spearheading electoral opposition, and some
Yemenis believe the regime, the ruling party or the security forces
encouraged the assassination in order to thwart the formation of an
effective opposition coalition. The other popular and plausible
theory is that "jihadi" or "salafi" elements outside the political
mainstream -- possibly with links to al-Qaeda -- have begun to
target secular and liberal intellectuals along with foreign
interests and Yemeni security forces. Ordinary Yemenis are mourning
the death of a man who embodied a great deal of the nation's past
and its hopes for the future.
The tragic
deaths of two well-respected American doctors who had spent their
adult lives at the Baptist mission hospital in Jibla and a
colleague, two days after the assassination of Jarallah Omar and one
day after threats issued by friends of al-Qaeda, seem to point in
the direction of a terror campaign directed against Yemenis and
Americans alike by a rather small but quite expert reactionary
underground, presumably trained in Afghanistan. Considering that the
dead are an opposition politician and three American civilians
living in Yemen for many years, it could be a bloody, indiscriminate
campaign along the lines of those waged in the 1990s in Egypt and
Algeria. The coincidence of two unprecedented and senseless crimes
-- a public assassination and the murder of unarmed foreigners --
has left the nation in shock.
The Salih
administration has contended all along that attacks on the USS Cole
and the French ship the Limburg, as well as shootings and bombings
in Sanaa, are aimed at destabilizing the Yemeni government and
disrupting its relations with the US. Since the attack on the Cole
in October 2000, US-Yemeni relations, virtually severed after Yemen
failed to join the US-led war on Iraq in 1991, have steadily
improved. The Yemeni government cooperated with US intelligence
agencies investigating the Cole incident and with the Predator
attack on a vehicle in the Yemeni desert in November 2002.
Acknowledging that al-Qaeda elements found sanctuary in isolated
communities along the Yemeni-Saudi frontier, Sanaa has been pleading
with Washington for massive American assistance to beef up its
maritime, border and domestic security. The Bush administration has
begun to comply with these requests, dangling prospects of hundreds
of millions of dollars' worth of training and equipment annually if
Yemen prosecutes the war on terror. After Spanish and American
forces intercepted North Korean Scud missiles bound for Yemen
earlier in December, Sanaa told US officials that it would be happy
to accept American weapons instead. Today the Salih government is
saying, we are in this war together.

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