From Mohammed Jamjoom and Hakim Almasmari, CNN
October
26, 2011 -- Updated 1633 GMT (0033 HKT)
Yemeni women burn veils to protest regime
Yemeni
women burn veils in protest
·
The women gathered their veils and scarves in a
pile and set it ablaze
·
The act is highly symbolic in the conservative
Muslim nation
·
A protester accused Ali Abdullah Saleh's regime of killing women and children
·
She said women would not tolerate silence from
tribal leaders
Sanaa, Yemen (CNN) -- Yemeni women defiantly burned their traditional
veils Wednesday in protest of President Ali Abdullah Saleh's
brutal crackdown on anti-government demonstrations.
Thousands
of women gathered in the capital, Sanaa, said
witnesses. They carried banners that read: "Saleh
the butcher is killing women and is proud of it" and "Women have no
value in the eyes in Ali Saleh."
They
collected their veils and scarves in a huge pile and set it ablaze -- an act
that is highly symbolic in the conservative Islamic nation, where women use
their veils to cover their faces and bodies. It's the first time in the nine
months of Yemen's uprising that such an event has occurred.
Inspired
by Yemeni activist Tawakkol Karman's Nobel Peace
Prize this month, more and more Yemeni women have taken to the streets and
escalated their campaign for help from the international community.
More
than 60 women were attacked in October alone by the government, said protester Ruqaiah Nasser. Government forces are raiding homes and
also killing children, she said.
She
said silence from tribal leaders on the matter is a "disgrace."
"We
will not stay quiet and will defend ourselves if our men can't defend us,"
Nasser said. "Tribes must understand they will not be respected by Yemeni
women if they stay quiet while their women are being attacked by the Saleh regime. Tribes who ignore our calls are cowards and
have no dignity."
"Saleh is killing women and children and this is against
tribal culture," she said. "Where are their voices when we need them?
It's a disgrace if they stay quiet."
The
women's protests came after the Yemeni government announced a cease-fire
Tuesday. But that did not appear to be holding.
At least
10 people died and dozens were injured earlier Tuesday in clashes between
Yemeni government security forces in the country's capital and the province of Taiz, medical officials reported.
Yemen's
government has said that opposition-supported militants are responsible for the
violence.
Saleh summoned the U.S. ambassador and reiterated a
promise to sign an agreement brokered by the Gulf Cooperation Council in which
he would step aside in exchange for immunity from prosecution, U.S. State
Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said.
However,
Saleh has repeatedly promised to sign the
council-backed deal and not done so. The embattled leader has clung to power
through the protracted protests.