Civil war Conflicts within the coalition resulted in the self-imposed exile of Vice President Ali Salem al-Beidh to Aden beginning in August 1993 and a deterioration in the general security situation as political rivals settled scores and tribal elements took advantage of the unsettled situation.
Haidar Abu Bakr al-Attas, the former Southern Prime Minister, continued to serve as Yemen's
Prime Minister, but his government was ineffective due to political infighting. Continuous negotiations between northern and southern leaders resulted in the signing of the document of pledge and accord in
Amman,
Jordan on 20 February 1994. Despite this, clashes intensified until civil war broke out in early May 1994. Significantly, one of the institutions that had not yet unified was the military arms of both nations. Southern leaders seceded and established the
Democratic Republic of Yemen (DRY) on 21 May 1994, but the new state was not recognised by the international community.
Ali Nasir Muhammad, the exiled South Yemen leader, assisted military operations against the secessionists. Aden was captured on 7 July 1994. Other resistance quickly collapsed and thousands of southern leaders and military went into exile. In the aftermath of the civil war,
Yemeni Socialist Party leaders within Yemen reorganised the party and elected a new
politburo in July 1994. However, the party remained disheartened and without its former influence. Islah held a party convention in September 1994. The
General People's Congress did the same in June 1995. In 1994,
amendments to the unity constitution eliminated the presidential council. President Ali Abdallah Saleh was elected by Parliament on 1 October 1994 to a 5-year term. The constitution provided that henceforth the President is to be elected by popular vote from at least two candidates selected by the legislature.
Post-civil war Adopting a Western style governmental system, Yemen held its first direct
presidential elections in September 1999, electing President Ali Abdullah Saleh to a 5-year term in what were generally considered free and fair elections. Yemen held its second multiparty
parliamentary elections in April 1997. Constitutional amendments adopted in the summer of 2000 extended the presidential term by two years, thus moving the next presidential elections to 2006. The amendments also extended the parliamentary term of office to a 6-year term, thus moving elections for these seats to 2003. On 20 February 2001, a new constitutional amendment created a
bicameral legislature consisting of a Shura Council (111 seats; members appointed by the president) and a House of Representatives (301 seats; members elected by popular vote). Yemen is now a
dominant-party system with the
General People's Congress in power. Friction and troubles continued, elements in the south perceive unfair treatment by the north. This has given birth to a popular movement called the
South Yemen Movement which calls for the return of an independent southern state. In 2015, this time as a pawn in the proxy war between
Saudi Arabia and Iran, Yemen again was engulfed in
civil war, which continues to this day.
Integrations • The
North Yemeni rial and the
South Yemeni dinar remained legal tender during a transitional period. In 1991, the dinar was withdrawn from circulation, with 26 rial exchanged for one dinar. In 1993, the first coins were issued for the Republic of Yemen called
Yemeni rials. • The capital of the Republic of Yemen is North's old capital,
Sanaa. • The South's "
Repeat, O World, My Song" became the country's national anthem. • 26 September and 14 October are both celebrated as Revolution Day, with the former celebrating the North's revolution against the
imams and the latter celebrating the South's revolution against the
British Empire. • 30 November is celebrated as Independence Day, as it is the day the South gained independence from the British, as opposed to 1 November, which was celebrated in the north as Independence Day from the
Ottoman Empire. • The Republic of Yemen kept the North's
United Nations name,
Yemen, as opposed to the South's
Democratic Yemen. • The Republic of Yemen accepts responsibility for all treaties and debts of its predecessors. • The Republic of Yemen kept the South's system of
Governorates (Muhafazah), and split the North's liwa (provinces) into smaller governorates, leaving the current
Governorates of Yemen. • The Republic of Yemen uses the North's
calling code, +967, as opposed to the South's +969. • The Republic of Yemen uses the North's
ISO 3166-1 alphabetic codes (
alpha-2: YE,
alpha-3: YEM), as opposed to the South's (alpha-2: YD, alpha-3: YMD); a new
numeric code was assigned for the unified country (887) to replace the old numeric codes (North: 886; South: 720), as is the custom for any merging of countries. ==See also==