Decolonisation and NLF seizure of power demonstration against the British presence during the
Aden emergency The first uprising against the British was in
Radfan on 14 October 1963, when 7,000 armed Radfani tribesmen, inspired by the coup in the north, joined the
National Liberation Front (NLF) with the goals of turning the tribes of the
Federation of South Arabia against the British, and achieving independence through
guerrilla warfare. The strategy of the NLF was to harass and exhaust the British military using
hit-and-run tactics. By 10 December 1963, the uprising had reached
Aden. An NLF
grenade attack against the
High Commissioner of Aden,
Kennedy Trevaskis, killed the High Commissioner's adviser and a bystander, and injured fifty other people. On that day, a
state of emergency was declared in Aden. On January 1964, the British responded by a 3-month
bombing campaign in Radfan, which subdued the insurgents. The insurgency in Radfan began raising questions in the
Parliament of the United Kingdom on what should the fate of Aden and the protectorates be. in
Mualla,
Aden By 1965, most western protectorates had fallen to the National Liberation Front. Hadhramaut seemed calm until 1966 because the British presence there was less than its counterpart in the
western protectorates.
Ali Salem al-Beidh and
Haidar al-Attas joined the NLF faction in the
eastern protectorates and prevented the sultans of the
Kathiri Sultanate and the
Qu'aiti Sultanate from entering their sultanates but allowed the Sultan of the
Mahra back, in sympathy for his old age. Al-Beidh played a major role in gathering supporters in favour of the NLF in Hadhramaut, taking advantage of the near absence of the British in the eastern protectorates. In February 1966, the British had announced that they would withdraw from Aden and cancel all protection treaties with the sultanates and sheikhdoms by 1968. The announcement came as a shock to the protected sultans and sheiks, with one of the sultans expressing his fear of "being murdered in the street". The insurgents did not trust the promise, reasoning that the British wouldn't be abandoning their important base of Aden "without a real fight." By March 1967, the British had set the date for their departure to be on November of that year. in Aden Following Israel's victory in the
Six-Day War of June 1967, which was considered a humiliation for the
Arab world, the anti-colonial sentiment was at its all-time high due to Britain's role in the creation of Israel following the
First World War. Slogans like "A bullet against Britain is a bullet against Israel" appeared, and attacks against the British had increased.
Graffiti of the acronyms of the NLF and FLOSY had filled the streets in Aden, and the infighting between those two groups for power had increased. In the same month, an NLF-directed
Arab Police mutiny in Crater ambushed a British military patrol and slaughtered three
Argyll & Sutherland Highlanders and
captured the city of Crater. The capture of Crater was considered a significant victory for the Arab world.
Colin Mitchell, also known as "Mad Mitch", led his battalion back into Crater and retook it with minimal casualties. However, his methods were deemed too extreme, and he was ejected from the army. The battle later came to be known as "the last battle of the British Empire." According to the American consul in Aden, the British handling of the insurgents "evolved from attempting to take them unharmed to
summary justice in the streets."
Independence The sultans tried to negotiate terms with the FLOSY, whom they calculated was the "lesser evil", but it came to little success. At that time, the British had advised the sultans to attend the ongoing
Geneva negotiations between the British and the NLF, hoping that the United Nations would arrange a solution for them. The British demands were an orderly handover to the authorities, and that the new state not interfere in the affairs of any country in the Arabian Peninsula. The British were surprised by the presence of people they thought were loyal to them alongside the popular Qahtan. The NLF had used the sultans' absences and toppled the sultanates and made headway in Aden, Hadhramaut, Mahra, and the island of
Socotra. On 7 November, the Federal Army came out in support of the NLF, and the British government was forced to negotiate a hasty handover. On 20 November, the British government eventually recognised the NLF as the de facto new power in the land, and spent their last 10 days trying to pare down their promised aid from £60 million to £12 million. The last British troops departed eleven hours before the birth of the new People’s Republic of Southern Yemen at midnight on 29–30 November, marking an end to 128 years of colonial rule, and on 14 December 1967, it was admitted into the
United Nations as a member state. The National Liberation Front had the upper hand at the expense of the Front for the Liberation of Occupied South Yemen, whose members were divided between joining the National Front or leaving for North Yemen. Abdullah Al-Asnag and
Mohammed Basindawa left for the
Yemen Arab Republic. Qahtan al-Shaabi assumed the presidency of a state that had never existed before, with a collapsed economy. Civilian workers and businessmen left, British support stopped, and the closure of the Suez Canal in 1967 reduced the number of ships crossing Aden by 75%. On 11 December 1967, the lands of what was called the "
feudal symbols and British agents" were confiscated, and the state was divided into six governorates. The move aimed to end tribal aspects in the state and ignore the tribal borders between the defunct sheikhdoms. On 16 June 1969, Qahtan fired Interior Minister
Muhammad Ali Haitham, but the latter withdrew his ties to With the tribes and the army, he was able to ally himself with Muhammad Saleh Al-Awlaki, and they reassembled the leftist forces that President Qahtan Al-Shaabi had dispersed. They were able to arrest him and place him under house arrest.
Reforms and the establishment of a Marxist-Leninist state The National Liberation Front, now rebranded as the National Front, had approximately 26,000 members, a small number of university-educated leaders, and all of them, without exception, had no experience in government. The front was divided into two right-wing and left-wing sections. The right-wingers and their popular leader, Qahtan, did not want to make major changes in the prevailing social and economic structure and took a conservative stance toward "liberating all Arab lands from colonialism, supporting the resistance of the Palestinian people, and supporting socialist regimes around the world to resist imperialism and colonial forces in the Third World." The leftist faction of the National Front was also promoting and opposing the establishment of popular forces and proposals to nationalise lands, and they were not preoccupied with the struggle of social classes. Qahtan wanted the continuation of existing institutions and their development. The leftist faction "wanted a social and economic transformation that would serve the broad segment of the working people instead of the wealthy minority", as they put it. on 20 March 1968, Qahtan's right-wing faction dismissed all leftist leaders from the government and party membership and was able to put down a rebellion led by leftist factions in the army in May of the same year. In July, August, and December 1968, the popular Qahtan faced new rebellions from leftist parties because all Arab countries welcomed the front. The National Liberation Front received a cold reception, as regimes like Egypt wanted to merge the National Front with the Front for the Liberation of Occupied South Yemen. The leftist faction was more numerous than the supporters of the popular Qahtan, and they wanted a regime that would lead the masses and face the great challenges facing the new state, the most important of which was the bankruptcy of the treasury. ,
Abdul Fattah Ismail, and
Abdullah Badheeb at the
Democratic Popular Union Party Festival in the 1970s, with portraits of
Karl Marx,
Friedrich Engels, and
Vladimir Lenin behind them On 22 June 1969, a radical
Marxist wing of the NLF formed a presidential committee of five people:
Salim Rubaya Ali, who became president, Muhammad Saleh Al-Awlaki, Ali Antar, Abdel Fattah Ismail, and Muhammad Ali Haitham, who became prime minister. They gained power in an event known as the "
Corrective Move". This radical wing reorganised the country into the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen (PDRY) on 30 November 1970. Subsequently, all political parties were amalgamated into the National Liberation Front, renamed the
Yemeni Socialist Party, which became the only legal party. This group took an extreme leftist line and declared its support for the Palestinians and the
Dhofar Revolution. West Germany severed its relationship with the state due to its recognition of East Germany. The United States also severed its relationship in October 1969. The new powers issued a new constitution, nationalised foreign banks and insurance companies, and changed the name of the state to The People's Democratic Republic of Yemen in line with the Marxist-Leninist approach they followed. A centrally planned economy was established. The People's Democratic Republic of Yemen established close ties with the
Soviet Union, the
German Democratic Republic,
Cuba, and the
Palestinian Liberation Organization.
East Germany's constitution of 1968 even served as a kind of blueprint for the PDRY's first constitution. , 1971 The new government embarked on a programme of
nationalisation, introduced
central planning, put limits on housing ownership and
rent, and implemented
land reforms. By 1973, the GDP of South Yemen increased by 25 percent. Despite the conservative environment and resistance, women became legally equal to men,
polygamy,
child marriage and arranged marriage were all banned by law and equal rights in divorce were sanctioned; all supported and protected by the state
General Union of Yemeni Women. The Republic also
secularised education and
sharia law was replaced by a
state legal code.
Slavery in Yemen, which had been abolished in
North Yemen by the
1962 revolution, was now abolished also in South Yemen. The major
communist powers assisted in the building of the PDRY's armed forces. Strong support from Moscow resulted in
Soviet naval forces gaining access to naval facilities in South Yemen. The most significant among them, a Soviet naval and air base on the island of Socotra for operations in the Indian Ocean.
Unification Against the background of the
perestroika in the
USSR, the main backer of the PDRY,
political reforms were started in the late 1980s.
Political prisoners were released, political parties were formed, and the system of justice was reckoned to be more equitable than in the North. In May 1988, the
YAR and PDRY governments came to an understanding that considerably reduced tensions, including agreement to renew discussions concerning unification, to establish a joint oil exploration area along their undefined border, to demilitarise the border, and to allow Yemenis unrestricted border passage based on only a national identification card. In November 1989, after returning from the
Soviet–Afghan War,
Osama bin Laden offered to send the newly formed
al-Qaeda to overthrow the South Yemeni government on behalf of
Saudi Arabia, but Prince
Turki bin Faisal found the plan reckless and declined. In 1990, the parties reached a full agreement on
joint governing of Yemen, and the countries were effectively merged as
Yemen. == Government and politics ==