The latest spasm of violence came a day after Saleh suddenly returned to Yemen after more than three months of being treated in Saudi Arabia following an assassination attempt on him in June. Saleh's return Friday apparently aimed to ensure his grip on power as his loyalists and opponents wage urban warfare in Sanaa.
Saleh's forces were battling on three fronts on Saturday.
In the northwest section of Sanaa, mortars rained down on the headquarters of the 1st Armored Division, led by Saleh's former ally Maj. Gen. Ali Mohsen al-Ahmar who months ago sided with the opposition and whose followers have since been protecting the protesters' daily sit-ins and marches on Change Square.
Eleven of al-Ahmar's troops were killed in the shelling and 112 were wounded, according to Abdel-Ghani al-Shimiri, a spokesman for the turncoat soldiers.
Around the square itself, Republican Guard forces led by Saleh's son, Ahmed, along with Central Security forces battled al-Ahmar's troops in an attempt to clear the square of protesters and end more than seven months of their encampment that has demanded Saleh's ouster.
Using anti-aircraft guns, automatic weapons and RPGs, Guard forces intensified the shelling of the streets surrounding the square, while large number of snipers on rooftops hunted down protesters.Mohammed al-Qabati, a medic who works at the field hospital set up at the square, said 29 people were killed there since the early hours Saturday, both from among the protesters and the troops guarding them.
He said 54 people were also wounded in the attack.
"More bodies and injured are pouring into the hospital," said al-Qabati, adding that ambulances have been forces to leave many bodies in the streets because of the heavy fighting. "Many of the injured get here by motorcycles."The scene was chaotic as thousands of protesters ran back and forth searching for a cover in nearby buildings, and witnesses said several houses were wrecked when hit by mortars as street battles raged between rival groups of soldiers.
Meanwhile, Yemen's interior minister, Gen. Mouthar al-Masri, told reporters on Saturday that eight government troops were killed and dozens of others were wounded. Al-Masri didn't elaborate when or how the casualties occurred, and it wasn't clear if he was referring to violence in Sanaa or elsewhere.The third front by Saleh's troops centered around Sanaa's district of Hassaba. Clashes there over the past two days between government forces and pro-opposition tribesmen killed 18 tribal fighters, according to a statement Saturday from tribal elders.
Hassaba is home to Yemen's most powerful tribal confederation, the Hashid, led by Sheik Sadeq al-Ahmar, another foe of Saleh's. The two Ahmars are not related.
Saturday's bloodshed also reinforced fears that Saleh's presence in the country has escalated the fighting into a full-fledged attempt to crush his rivals.
His return had caught the White House off guard. U.S. officials conceded it was a surprise and said that Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton wasn't warned of Saleh's plans when she met Tuesday in New York with the foreign minister of Saudi Arabia, which has been working with Washington and Yemen to try to arrange a transfer of power.
A degree of stability in the strategic but impoverished Arab nation is a priority for the United States, which wants a partner to continue the fight against one of al-Qaida's most active branches, based in Yemen and accused of plotting attacks in the U.S. Islamic militants have already exploited months of Yemen's turmoil to seize control of cities in southern Yemen.
Yemen's uprising began in February as the unrest spreading throughout the Arab world set off largely peaceful protests in this deeply unstable corner of the Arabian Peninsula. Saleh's government responded with a heavy crackdown, with hundreds killed and thousands wounded so far.
Saturday's deaths raise to at least 140 the number of people killed in this week's violence in Yemen. Most of the dead are in Sanaa, where many residents have been hunkered down in their homes or fled the city.
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