Difference between revisions of "Yemen" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Category:Geography and demographics]]
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{{infobox Country
[[Category:Countries]]
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|native_name                = الجمهورية اليمنية <br/>''{{Unicode|al-Jumhūrīyah al-Yamanīyah}}''
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|conventional_long_name      = Republic of Yemen
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|common_name = Yemen
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|image_flag = Flag of Yemen.svg
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|image_coat = Yemencoa.jpg
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|symbol_type = Emblem
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|image_map = LocationYemen.png
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|national_motto = الله، الوطن، الثورة، الوحدة {{Spaces|2}}<small>([[Arabic language|Arabic]])</small><br />''"Allah, al-Watan, ath-Thawrah, al-Wahdah"''{{Spaces|2}}<small>([[transliteration]])<br />"God, Country, Revolution, Unity"</small>
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|national_anthem = ''[[National anthem of Yemen|United Republic]]''
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|official_languages = [[Arabic language|Arabic]]
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|demonym = [[Yemeni (disambiguation)|Yemeni]], [[Yemenite]]
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|capital = [[Sana‘a]]
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|latd = 15
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|latm = 21
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|lats = 17
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|latNS = N
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|longd = 44
 +
|longm = 12
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|longs = 24
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|longEW = E
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||largest_city = [[Sana‘a]]
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|government_type = [[Unitary state|Unitary]] [[Presidential System]]
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|leader_title1 = [[President of Yemen|President]]
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|leader_title2 = [[Prime Minister of Yemen|Prime Minister]]
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|leader_name1 = [[Ali Abdullah Saleh]]
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|leader_name2 = [[Ali Muhammad Mujawar]]
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|legislature = [[Assembly of Representatives of Yemen|Assembly of Representatives]]
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|area_rank = 50th
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|area_magnitude = 1 E8
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|area_km2 = 555,000
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|area_sq_mi = 203,849 <!--Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]]—>
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|percent_water = negligible
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|population_estimate = 23,580,000<ref name=unpop>Population Division of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs of the United Nations Secretariat, [http://www.un.org/esa/population/publications/wpp2008/wpp2008_text_tables.pdf World Population Prospects, Table A.1] ''World Population Prospects: The 2008 Revision. Highlights'' (New York, NY: United Nations, 2009). Retrieved October 16, 2011. </ref>
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|population_estimate_year = 2009
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|population_estimate_rank = 51st
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|population_census = 22,230,531
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|population_census_year = July 2007
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|population_density_km2 = 44.7
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|population_density_sq_mi = 115.7 <!--Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]]—>
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|population_density_rank = 160th
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|GDP_PPP_year = 2009
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|GDP_PPP = $58.218 billion<ref name=imf2>International Monetary Fund, Report for Selected Countries and Subjects: Yemen.</ref>
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|GDP_PPP_rank =
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|GDP_PPP_per_capita = $2,457<ref name=imf2/>
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|GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank =
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|GDP_nominal = $25.131 billion<ref name=imf2/>
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|GDP_nominal_rank =
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|GDP_nominal_year = 2009
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|GDP_nominal_per_capita = $1,061<ref name=imf2/>
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|GDP_nominal_per_capita_rank =
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|sovereignty_type = Establishment
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|established_event1 = [[North Yemen]] independence from the [[Ottoman Empire]]
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|established_date1 = November 1, 1918
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|established_event2 = [[South Yemen]] independence from the [[United Kingdom]]
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|established_date2 = November 30, 1967
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|established_event3 = [[Yemeni unification|Unification]]
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|established_date3 = May 22, 1990
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|HDI_year = 2007 <!-- Please use the year in which the HDI data refers to and not the publication year —>
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|HDI = {{increase}} 0.439<ref name="HDI">{{cite web|url=http://hdrstats.undp.org/en/countries/country_fact_sheets/cty_fs_YEM.html|title=Human Development Report 2009: Yemen|publisher=The United Nations|accessdate=2009-10-18}}</ref>
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|HDI_rank = 133rd
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|HDI_category = <span style="color:#FF0000;">low</span>
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|FSI = 93.2 {{decrease}} 3.4
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|FSI_year = 2007
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|FSI_rank = 24th
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|FSI_category = <span style="color:#FF0000;">Alert</span>
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|currency = [[Yemeni rial]]
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|currency_code = YER
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|country_code = YEM
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|time_zone =
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|utc_offset = +3
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|time_zone_DST =
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|utc_offset_DST =
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|drives_on = right<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.newssafety.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=section&layout=blog&id=28&Itemid=100385 | title=Yemen | publisher=International News Safety Institute | accessdate=2009-10-14}}</ref>
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|cctld = [[.ye]]
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|calling_code = [[Telephone numbers in Yemen|967]]
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|footnotes =
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}}
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The '''Republic of Yemen''' is a country on the southwestern corner of the [[Arabian Peninsula]], bordering the [[Arabian Sea]] and [[Gulf of Aden]] on the south and the [[Red Sea]] on the west. It borders only two other countries, [[Oman]] to the northeast and [[Saudi Arabia]] to the north, and its shape bears a resemblance to a forearm lying prone with a raised clenched fist. Yemen's territory includes the remote island of Socotra, about 350 km to the south off the [[Horn of Africa]].
  
{| border=1 align=right cellpadding=4 cellspacing=0 width=300 style="margin: 0 0 1em 1em; background: #f9f9f9; border: 1px #aaaaaa solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 95%;"
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Because the border with the Saudi kingdom is simply a line on the map and not strictly defined as to where in the shifting desert sands it actually runs, the area of Yemen can only be estimated rather than exactly determined. It is somewhere in excess of 500,000 km², making it the second-largest nation on the Arabian Peninsula and about the size of [[Colorado]] and [[Wyoming]] combined. Yemen's population is close to 21 million, ranking it second again on the peninsula and approaching that of [[Texas]].
|+<big><big>'''&#1575;&#1604;&#1580;&#1605;&#1607;&#1608;&#1585;&#1610;&#1617;&#1577; &#1575;&#1604;&#1610;&#1605;&#1606;&#1610;&#1577;<br>Al-Jumhuriyah al-Yamaniyah<br>Republic of Yemen'''</big></big>
 
|-
 
| style="background:#efefef;" align="center" colspan="2" |
 
{| border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0"
 
|-
 
| align="center" width="140px" | [[Image:Flag of Yemen.png|125px|]] || align="center" width="140px" | [[Image:Yemencoa.jpg]] ||
 
|-
 
| align="center" width="140px" | ([[Flag of Yemen|In Detail]]) || align="center" width="140px" | ([[Coat of Arms of Yemen|In Detail]])
 
|}
 
|-
 
| align=center colspan=2 style="background: #ffffff;" | [[image:LocationYemen.png]]
 
|-
 
| '''Official language''' || Arabic
 
|-
 
| '''Capital''' || Sana'a
 
|-
 
| '''President''' || Ali Abdullah Saleh
 
|-
 
| '''Prime Minister''' || Abdul Qadir Bajamal
 
|-
 
| '''Area'''<br>&nbsp;- Total  || [[Ranked 48th]] <br> 527,970 km&sup2;
 
|-
 
| '''Population'''<br>&nbsp;- Total (2005) <br>&nbsp;- Density || [[Ranked 51st]] <br> 20,727,063 <br> 37/km&sup2;
 
|-
 
| '''Unification''' || 1990
 
|-
 
| '''Currency''' || Yemeni rial
 
|-
 
| '''Time zone''' || Universal Time +3
 
|-
 
| '''National anthem''' || ''United Republic''
 
|-
 
| '''Internet TLD''' || .ye
 
|-
 
| '''Country Calling Code''' || 967
 
|}
 
  
The '''Republic of Yemen''', composed of former [[North Yemen|North]] and [[South Yemen]], is a country on the [[Arabian Peninsula]] in [[Southwest Asia]] and is a part of the [[Middle East]], bordering the [[Arabian Sea]] and [[Gulf of Aden]] on the south and the [[Red Sea]] on the west. It borders [[Oman]] to the northeast and [[Saudi Arabia]] elsewhere.  Its territory includes the remote island of [[Socotra]], about 350 km to the south off the coast of [[East Africa]].
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The name Yemen is not of certain origin but probably derives from the Arabic word meaning "south," signifying its location on the Arabian Peninsula. Yemen's relative poverty compared to all other nations on the peninsula may partly be due to its having been a country divided in two for the better part of three centuries.
  
 
== Geography ==
 
== Geography ==
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The landscape of Yemen changes dramatically in the transition from its shorelines toward the great Rub al-Khali desert. The coastal area, often called the "hot land," is a desert-like plain 30 to 40 km wide. Reefs protect the coastline and there are many beautiful beaches.
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The most spectacular geographical feature of Yemen is the western mountain slopes. Rising steeply to 2000 m, they are lined with tens of thousands of intricately fashioned terraces. These are part of an age-old but highly sophisticated system of water and soil management that enabled an agriculture-based society to flourish in an otherwise hostile environment. Deep ''wadis'' (valleys) divide the mountains and move heavy seasonal rainfall toward the sea. The terraces are used to cultivate coffee and various grain crops.
  
Yemen is in [[Southwest Asia]], in the south of [[Arabia]], bordering the [[Arabian Sea]], [[Gulf of Aden]], and [[Red Sea]], west of [[Oman]] and south of [[Saudi Arabia]]. It is considered to be one of the fifteen states that comprise the [[Cradle of Humanity]].  
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Farther inland, the central highlands have several large basins, one of which encloses the capital, Sana'a, at an altitude of 2,350 m. They also boast the highest mountain on the peninsula, Nabi Shu'aib (3,650 m). Large-scale agriculture is practiced here, particularly of grapes, grain, fruits, and vegetables.
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[[Image:Yemen-map.gif|thumb|Map of Yemen]]
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To the east, the mountains range mostly between 1000 m and 2000 m and are barren and rugged, but agriculture exists in the occasional ''wadi.'' In the area where the mountains meet the desert, or Empty Quarter, only grass and shrubs grow and Bedouin graze cattle, but further east, signs of life cease and sand dunes rule the landscape.
  
== History ==
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The rest of the country, extending to the [[Oman]]i border, is almost completely desert, with less than 1 percent of the land under cultivation. Vast areas separate a few scattered settlements.
  
Yemen was one of the oldest centres of civilization in the Near East. Between the 9th century B.C.E. and the 6th century AD, it was part of the [[Minaean]], [[Sabaean]], [[Himyarite]], [[Qataban]]ian, [[Hadhramawt]]ian, and [[Awsan]]ian kingdoms, which controlled the lucrative spice trade. It was known to the [[Ancient Rome|Romans]] as "Arabia Felix" ("Happy Arabia") because of the riches its trade generated; [[Augustus Caesar]] attempted to annex it, but the expedition failed, but [[Persian]] [[Shahanshah|King of Kings]] were more successful and Yemen became a Persian province in 597/8 under a Persian [[satrap]]. In the [[7th century]], Islamic [[caliph]]s began to exert control over the area. After this caliphate broke up, the former north Yemen came under control of [[Imams]] of various dynasties usually of the [[Zaidi]] sect, who established a theocratic political structure that survived until modern times. (Imam is a religious term. The [[Shiites]] apply it to the prophet Muhammad's son-in-law Ali, his sons Hassan and Hussein, and subsequent lineal descendants, whom they consider to have been divinely ordained unclassified successors of the prophet.)
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Yemen's easternmost and southernmost points lie on the distant island of Socotra, which lies closer to [[Somalia]] than to Yemen and is nearly the size of [[Rhode Island]]. Like many remote islands, Socotra has some unique flora and fauna; its name likely derives from a Sanskrit phrase meaning "island of bliss."
  
Egyptian [[Sunni]] caliphs occupied much of north Yemen throughout the 11th century. By the [[16th century]] and again in the [[19th century]], north Yemen was part of the [[Ottoman Empire]], and in some periods its Imams exerted control over south Yemen.
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Besides the two countries that Yemen borders, it has near neighbors in [[Djibouti]] and [[Eritrea]], [[Africa|African]] nations across the narrow Bab el Mandeb Strait at the southern end of the [[Red Sea]].
  
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== History ==
  
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===Ancient kingdoms===
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Yemen is one of the oldest centers of civilization in the [[Middle East]]. Various ancient kingdoms developed between the ninth century B.C.E. and the fifth century C.E. in the rugged valleys between the central highlands and the desert. The famed Queen of Sheba is said to have ruled there, though other locations outside Yemen make the same claim. The source of these kingdoms' wealth and power was the spice trade, which also moved incense and gold overland by camel caravan to Mediterranean markets. The land centering on Yemen was known as ''Arabia Felix'' ("Fortunate Arabia") by the [[Roman Empire]], which believed it held fabulous riches. The Romans made an unsuccessful attempt to conquer the area under [[Augustus Caesar]], but later managed to break the Arabian control of the trade routes by finding sources for merchandise farther afield, mainly in [[India]], and using waterways to get to them, which eventually brought the decline of the overland passage.
  
== Economy ==
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===Arrival of Islam===
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[[Ethiopia]]n [[Christianity|Christians]] ruled the area for a short period in the 6th century C.E., but they were expelled by a Persian army that remained in power until the arrival of Islam in 628, the same year [[Muhammad]] re-entered [[Mecca]] in triumph. The emergence of [[Islam]] sparked an unprecedented spiritual revival in the region, profoundly changing and reshaping Yemen. The Persian governor was among the first to embrace Islam. Missionaries sent by Muhammad built Yemen's first mosques. In the next two centuries, Yemenis constituted a large part of the Islamic forces that swept through the Middle East and westward to [[Spain]]. They tended to excel as architects, administrators, and merchants even when they settled down far from their homeland.
  
At unification, both the YAR and the PDRY were struggling, underdeveloped economies. In the north, disruptions of civil war (1962-70) and frequent periods of [[drought]] had dealt severe blows to a previously prosperous agricultural sector. [[Coffee]] production, formerly the north's main export and principal form of foreign exchange, declined as the cultivation of [[qat]] increased. Low domestic industrial output and a lack of raw materials made the YAR dependent on a wide variety of imports.
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Distant [[caliphate]]s ruled over Yemen at times; at other times local Shi’a imamates held sway for centuries. The whole country, as it is known today, seldom remained united since different caliphs and imams often exerted control in the northern and southern areas.
  
Remittances from Yemenis working abroad and [[foreign aid]] paid for perennial trade deficits. Substantial Yemeni communities exist in many countries of the world, including Yemen's immediate neighbors on the Arabian Peninsula, [[Indonesia]], [[India]], [[East Africa]], and also the [[United Kingdom]], and the [[United States]]. Beginning in the mid-[[1950]]s, the [[Soviet Union]] and [[China]] provided large-scale assistance.
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===Colonial period===
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With the European discovery of the sea route around Africa to India, Yemen quickly gained strategic importance to the European powers, first the [[Portugal|Portuguese]], later the [[United Kingdom|British]]. The interests of the Europeans frequently clashed with Islamic rulers, including the emerging superpower of the Middle East, the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman Turks]], who occupied Yemen for nearly a century, beginning in 1538, until they were expelled.
  
In the south, pre-independence economic activity was overwhelmingly concentrated in the port city of Aden. The seaborne transit trade, which the port relied upon, collapsed with the closure of the [[Suez Canal]] and Britain's withdrawal from Aden in [[1967]].  
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During this period, Yemen again experienced a prosperous period with the world's discovery of [[coffee]], the cultivation of which some believe began in southern Arabia. Yemen held a global monopoly on coffee production and trade and in time allowed British, [[Netherlands|Dutch]], [[France|French]], and later [[United States|American]] trade missions and factories to be established on the Red Sea coast. Local coffee production declined steeply, though, after the colonial powers established plantations in other locations overseas.
  
Since unification, the government has worked to integrate two relatively disparate economic systems. However, severe shocks, including the return in 1990 of approximately 850,000 Yemenis from the Gulf states, a subsequent major reduction of aid flows, and internal political disputes culminating in the 1994 civil war hampered economic growth.
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===Division into north and south===
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In 1729, a sultan precipitated the split between northern and southern Yemen that would last 260 years by gaining independence from the ruling imam. In an attempt to secure the trade route to India, the British occupied the port of Aden, overlooking the gulf of the same name, in 1839. This prompted the Turks to safeguard their interests along the Red Sea by retaking the northern part of Yemen in 1848. The border between the two regions of Yemen was fixed by the two powers in 1905.
  
Since the conclusion of the war, the government entered into agreement with the [[International Monetary Fund]] (IMF) to institute an extremely successful structural adjustment program. Phase one of the IMF program included major financial and monetary reforms, including floating the currency, reducing the budget deficit, and cutting subsidies. Phase two will address structural issues such as civil service reform. The [[World Bank]] also is active in Yemen, with 22 active projects in 2004, including projects to improve governance in the public sector, water, and education. Since 1998, the government of Yemen has sought to implement World Bank economic and fiscal recommendations. In subsequent years, Yemen has lowered its debt burden through Paris Club agreements and restructuring U.S. foreign debt. In 2003, government reserves reached $5 billion.
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The Turks withdrew with the collapse of the Ottoman Empire after [[World War I]]. The xenophobic imams that succeeded them in the north kept the area in civil war and dodged various assassination attempts even after rebel forces backed by [[Egypt]] drove the ruling dynasty into exile in 1962. In the south, centering on Aden, the British initially made peace with the tribes and created a protectorate. But in time, they found themselves fighting multiple liberation groups and hastily withdrew their forces in 1967, leaving power in the hands of a communist front. The resulting people's republic was the only declared communist state in the Arab world, which left it isolated from most other Arab countries.
  
Marib oil contains associated [[natural gas]]. Proven reserves of 10-13 trillion cubic feet (283-368 km&sup3;) could sustain a liquid natural gas (LNG) export project.
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===Unification===
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[[Image:Sanaa.JPG|thumb|left|300px|Sana'a, the capital of Yemen]]
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Unification of the two republics had been the declared goal of the two Yemens since the beginning. Ideological differences as well as the conflicting interests of [[Saudi Arabia]] (which backed the north) and the [[Soviet Union]] (which supported the south), however, made such a union seem impossible. A series of border clashes in the 1970s was followed in the 1980s with attempts on paper at unification, but no real developments came about until the collapse of the [[Iron Curtain]] in 1989. Before the end of that year, an agreement for a unity constitution was signed. In 1990, the Republic of Yemen was declared, with Sana'a as the capital and the north's President Ali Abdullah Saleh as the new head of state.
  
==Foreign relations==
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Difficulties persisted, however, between the regions of the new country. In 1994, open civil war erupted between north and south, a conflict that was won by the central government, which sent the southern leadership into exile.
  
[[Image:Yemen-map.gif|thumb|Map of Yemen]]
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In the twenty-first century, Yemen has been in the news mainly with the rise there of fundamentalist Islam, particularly in the south. This glaringly came to the world's attention with the suicide bombing attack on an American navy ship, the USS ''Cole,'' in Aden's harbor in 2000 by [[Al-Qaeda]] followers.
  
The geography and ruling Imams of north Yemen kept the country isolated from foreign influence before 1962. The country's relations with Saudi Arabia were defined by the Taif Agreement of 1934, which delineated the northernmost part of the border between the two kingdoms and set the framework for commercial and other intercourse. The Taif Agreement has been renewed periodically in 20-year increments, and its validity was reaffirmed in 1995. Relations with the British colonial authorities in [[Aden]] and the south were usually tense.
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== Economy ==
  
The Soviet and Chinese Aid Missions established in 1958 and 1959 were the first important non-Muslim presence in north Yemen. Following the September 1962 revolution, the Yemen Arab Republic became closely allied with and heavily dependent upon Egypt. Saudi Arabia aided the royalists in their attempt to defeat the Republicans and did not recognize the Yemen Arab Republic until 1970. Subsequently, Saudi Arabia provided Yemen substantial budgetary and project support. At the same time, Saudi Arabia maintained direct contact with Yemeni tribes, which sometimes strained its official relations with the Yemeni Government. Hundreds of thousands of Yemenis found employment in Saudi Arabia during the late 1970s and 1980s.
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Development in a country where virtually no modern structures existed until the 1960s is a formidable task. The British had brought development to the area around Aden, but the rest of the country had no schools, administrative service, local currency or banking system, or health services. Electricity, modern communications, and water and sanitation systems were virtually non-existent. Goods in Yemen were transported on the backs of laborers and animals, and 90 percent of the people were engaged in [[subsistence farming|subsistence agriculture]].
  
In February 1989, north Yemen joined [[Iraq]], [[Jordan]], and [[Egypt]] in forming the [[Arab Cooperation Council]] (ACC), an organization created partly in response to the founding of the [[Gulf Cooperation Council]], and intended to foster closer economic cooperation and integration among its members. After unification, the Republic of Yemen was accepted as a member of the ACC in place of its YAR predecessor. In the wake of the Gulf crisis, the ACC has remained inactive. Yemen is not a member of the Gulf Cooperation Council.
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The difficult terrain and lack of educated, qualified, and experienced personnel remain the main obstacles to Yemen's development. Hundreds of thousands of Yemenis found low-status employment in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states during the late 1970s and 1980s. The [[Gulf War]] forced the return home of at least 850,000 of them. Remittances from Yemenis working abroad have long contributed heavily to the country's economy. Substantial Yemeni communities exist in many areas of the globe, including the nation's Arab neighbors, [[Indonesia]], India, East Africa, and also the U.K. and the U.S.
  
British authorities left southern Yemen in November 1967 in the wake of an intense terrorist campaign. The people's democratic Republic of Yemen, the successor to British colonial rule, had diplomatic relations with many nations, but its major links were with the Soviet Union and other [[Marxism|Marxist]] countries. Relations between it and the conservative Arab states of the Arabian Peninsula were strained. There were military clashes with Saudi Arabia in 1969 and 1973, and the PDRY provided active support for the [[Dhofar]] rebellion against the Sultanate of Oman. The PDRY was the only Arab state to vote against admitting new Arab states from the Gulf area to the United Nations and the Arab League. The PDRY provided sanctuary and material support to various insurgent groups around the Middle East.
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The western mountain slopes are the natural habitat of coffee, a crop that probably began its world career in Yemen. Other areas are also agriculturally productive. Large papaya, mango, and banana groves are found in the highland valleys, and citrus and watermelon plantations dot the countryside farther east. Where irrigation is available, dates and cotton grow well in the coastal region.
  
Yemen is a member of the United Nations, the Arab League, and the organization of the Islamic conference. Yemen participates in the nonaligned movement. The Republic of Yemen accepted responsibility for all treaties and debts of its predecessors, the YAR and the PDRY. Yemen has acceded to the nuclear nonproliferation treaty. The Gulf crisis dramatically affected Yemen's foreign relations. As a member of the UN Security Council (UNSC) for 1990 and 1991,Yemen abstained on a number of UNSC resolutions concerning Iraq and Kuwait and voted against the "use of force resolution." Western and Gulf Arab states reacted by curtailing or canceling aid programs and diplomatic contacts. At least 850,000 Yemenis returned from Saudi Arabia and the Gulf.
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Yet Yemen imports more than 60 percent of its food, and about one out of five Yemenis suffer from malnutrition. Agriculture employs more than half the labor force, but only about 6 percent of the land is capable of cultivation.  
  
Subsequent to the liberation of [[Kuwait]], Yemen continued to maintain high-level contacts with Iraq. This hampered its efforts to rejoin the Arab mainstream and to mend fences with its immediate neighbors. In 1993, Yemen launched an unsuccessful diplomatic offensive to restore relations with its Gulf neighbors. Some of its aggrieved neighbors actively aided the south during the 1994 civil war. Since the end of that conflict, tangible progress has been made on the diplomatic front in restoring normal relations with Yemen's neighbors. The Omani-Yemeni border has been officially demarcated. In the summer of 2000, Yemen and Saudi Arabia signed an International Border Treaty settling a 50-year-old dispute over the location of the border between the two countries. Yemen settled its dispute with [[Eritrea]] over the Hanish Islands in 1998.
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Modest amounts of oil have been found in Yemeni territory since 1984, mainly in the desert east of Sana'a, enough not only to make the country an exporter of the resource but to account for nearly 90 percent of all exports in value. Pipelines run from the oilfields to ports on both the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. There are also natural gas reserves believed to be even larger than the oilfields they lie adjacent to.
  
 
== Demographics ==
 
== Demographics ==
  
Unlike other people of the [[Arabian Peninsula]] who have historically been nomads or semi-nomads, Yemenis are almost entirely sedentary and live in small villages and towns scattered throughout the highlands and coastal regions.
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Unlike other people of the Arabian Peninsula who have historically been nomads or semi-nomads, Yemenis outside the cities live in small villages and towns and tend to stay put.
 
 
Yemenis are divided into two principal Islamic religious groups: the Shia [[Zaidi]] sect, found in the north and northwest, and the [[Shafa'i]] school of Sunni Muslims, found in the south and southeast. Yemenis are mainly of Semitic origin. Arabic is the official language, although English is increasingly understood in major cities. In the [[Mahra]] area (the extreme east), several non-Arabic languages are spoken. When the former states of north and south Yemen were established, most resident minority groups departed.
 
  
There was once a sizeable Jewish minority in Yemen with a distinct culture.  This community is [[Jewish exodus from Arab lands|reduced to a few hundred individuals]].  See article on ''[[Yemenite Jews]]''.
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Most Yemenis belong to one of two principal Islamic religious groups: the Shi’a, found in the north and northwest, and the Sunni, who live predominately in the south and southeast. Many minority groups have departed over the decades and centuries, the best known being the "Yemenite Jews" who once formed a sizable community with a distinct culture and long history. Soon after the establishment of [[Israel]], a massive airlift transported practically all Jews in Yemen, nearly 50,000, to their ancestral homeland in 1949 and 1950.
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[[Arabic language|Arabic]] is the official language, although [[English language|English]] is increasingly spoken, particularly in the two main cities. Other Semitic dialects rarely heard elsewhere are spoken in scattered sections of the country. One is Soqotri, the main language spoken on the outlying island of Socotra; it is most closely related to a tongue spoken in a small eastern area of the mainland and another in a remote area of Oman.
  
The country has one of the world's highest birth rates; the average Yemeni woman bears seven children. Although this is similar to the rate in [[Somalia]] to the south, it is roughly twice as high as that of Saudi Arabia and nearly three times as high as those in the more modernized Gulf Arab states.
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Socotra is the one part of Yemen where people of African descent are a majority of the populace. They tend to live near the coastline while those of Arab ancestry reside inland. There are more than 60,000 people living on the island.
  
==Languages==
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Yemen has one of the world's highest birth rates; the average woman bears seven children. Although this is similar to the rates in nearby East Africa, it is roughly twice as high as that of Saudi Arabia and nearly three times higher than those in the more modernized Gulf states. More than half of Yemen's population is under 16 years of age.
While the national language is Arabic (spoken in several regional dialects), Yemen is one of the main homelands of the [[South Semitic]] family of languages, which  includes the non-Arabic language of the ancient Sabaean Kingdom. Its modern Yemeni descendents are closely related to the modern Semitic languages of [[Ethiopia]], including [[Amharic language|Amharic]], the national language.  However, only a small remnant of those languages exists in modern Yemen, notably on the island of [[Socotra]] and in the back hills of the [[Hadhramaut]] coastal region.  Modern [[South Arabian]] languages spoken in Yemen include [[Mehri language|Mehri]], with 70,643 speakers, [[Soqotri language|Soqotri]], with an estimated 43,000 speakers (2004 census) mainly on the island of [[Socotra]], and [[Bathari language|Bathari]] (with an estimated total of only 200 speakers).
 
 
 
English is used as foreign language and is taught in public schools, starting from grade 7. Some private schools teach English, starting from grade 1, and use it as the main language of communication. The new generation is proud to learn English.
 
  
 
==Culture==
 
==Culture==
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One of Yemen's most prized art forms is the recitation of poetry in classical and colloquial styles. For centuries poetry has been spoken, sung, and also improvised during social events, at special performances, and in competition. Poetry events are also recognized as occasions where topics normally left untouched can be safely broached.
  
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[[Image:Catha edulis.jpg|thumb|''Khat'' plant]]
 +
The chewing of ''khat,'' or ''qat,'' the leaves of a flowering shrub that grows locally, is practically a national pastime among the male population. The use of ''khat'' predates that of coffee and is used in similar social contexts. The juices of the leaves bring users slowly to a state of euphoria, stimulation, and sometimes sleeplessness. ''Khat''-chewing sessions can last for hours after meals or in open forums where issues of the day are discussed. In sharp contrast to the opinions of the Saudi clergy, who strictly ban the substance, Yemeni authorities believe that it brings no harm to health or society. Only in [[Somalia]] is the use of the leaves more prevalent than in Yemen.
  
 +
Yemen is basically a poor country, perhaps not as poor as its African neighbors but definitely not as prosperous as its fellow Arab nations. Part of the reason is that a rigid caste-like system rules the Yemeni social hierarchy, especially in areas of work. Those occupying the highest levels can all trace their lineage back to Muhammad. Those in the lower strata are poorly educated and have an indefinite genealogy. They engage in low-status occupations that in most cases are hereditary. Long-term male labor migration within and outside the peninsula has resulted in some changes in the traditional division of labor, since women have had to take over some male tasks, particularly in agriculture.
  
 +
==Notes==
 +
<references/>
  
 +
{{credit|30205962}}
  
 
+
[[Category:Geography]]
 
+
[[Category:Countries]]
== External links ==
+
[[Category:Public]]
 
 
'''Government'''
 
*[http://www.yemenpresident.com/ President of Yemen]
 
 
 
'''General information'''
 
*[http://www.al-bab.com/yemen/ Arab Gateway - ''Yemen'']
 
*[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/world/middle_east/country_profiles/784383.stm BBC News Country Profile - ''Yemen'']
 
*[http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/ym.html CIA World Factbook - ''Yemen'']
 
*[http://dmoz.org/Regional/Middle_East/Yemen/ Open Directory Project - ''Yemen''] directory category
 
*[http://www.state.gov/p/nea/ci/c2423.htm US State Department - ''Yemen''] includes Background Notes, Country Study and major reports
 
*[http://dir.yahoo.com/regional/countries/yemen/ Yahoo! - ''Yemen''] directory category
 
*[http://www.ethnologue.com/show_family.asp?subid=90981 South Arabian Semitic languages] family tree from SIL's Ethnologue.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
{{credit|30205962}}
 

Latest revision as of 00:57, 17 April 2023

الجمهورية اليمنية
al-Jumhūrīyah al-Yamanīyah
Republic of Yemen
Flag of Yemen Emblem of Yemen
Mottoالله، الوطن، الثورة، الوحدة  (Arabic)
"Allah, al-Watan, ath-Thawrah, al-Wahdah" (transliteration)
"God, Country, Revolution, Unity"
AnthemUnited Republic
Location of Yemen
Capital
(and largest city)
Sana‘a
15°21′N 44°12′E
Official languages Arabic
Demonym Yemeni, Yemenite
Government Unitary Presidential System
 -  President Ali Abdullah Saleh
 -  Prime Minister Ali Muhammad Mujawar
Legislature Assembly of Representatives
Establishment
 -  North Yemen independence from the Ottoman Empire November 1, 1918 
 -  South Yemen independence from the United Kingdom November 30, 1967 
 -  Unification May 22, 1990 
Area
 -  Total 555,000 km² (50th)
203,849 sq mi 
 -  Water (%) negligible
Population
 -  2009 estimate 23,580,000[1] (51st)
 -  July 2007 census 22,230,531 
 -  Density 44.7/km² (160th)
115.7/sq mi
GDP (PPP) 2009 estimate
 -  Total $58.218 billion[2] 
 -  Per capita $2,457[2] 
GDP (nominal) 2009 estimate
 -  Total $25.131 billion[2] 
 -  Per capita $1,061[2] 
Currency Yemeni rial (YER)
Time zone (UTC+3)
Internet TLD .ye
Calling code [[+967]]

The Republic of Yemen is a country on the southwestern corner of the Arabian Peninsula, bordering the Arabian Sea and Gulf of Aden on the south and the Red Sea on the west. It borders only two other countries, Oman to the northeast and Saudi Arabia to the north, and its shape bears a resemblance to a forearm lying prone with a raised clenched fist. Yemen's territory includes the remote island of Socotra, about 350 km to the south off the Horn of Africa.

Because the border with the Saudi kingdom is simply a line on the map and not strictly defined as to where in the shifting desert sands it actually runs, the area of Yemen can only be estimated rather than exactly determined. It is somewhere in excess of 500,000 km², making it the second-largest nation on the Arabian Peninsula and about the size of Colorado and Wyoming combined. Yemen's population is close to 21 million, ranking it second again on the peninsula and approaching that of Texas.

The name Yemen is not of certain origin but probably derives from the Arabic word meaning "south," signifying its location on the Arabian Peninsula. Yemen's relative poverty compared to all other nations on the peninsula may partly be due to its having been a country divided in two for the better part of three centuries.

Geography

The landscape of Yemen changes dramatically in the transition from its shorelines toward the great Rub al-Khali desert. The coastal area, often called the "hot land," is a desert-like plain 30 to 40 km wide. Reefs protect the coastline and there are many beautiful beaches.

The most spectacular geographical feature of Yemen is the western mountain slopes. Rising steeply to 2000 m, they are lined with tens of thousands of intricately fashioned terraces. These are part of an age-old but highly sophisticated system of water and soil management that enabled an agriculture-based society to flourish in an otherwise hostile environment. Deep wadis (valleys) divide the mountains and move heavy seasonal rainfall toward the sea. The terraces are used to cultivate coffee and various grain crops.

Farther inland, the central highlands have several large basins, one of which encloses the capital, Sana'a, at an altitude of 2,350 m. They also boast the highest mountain on the peninsula, Nabi Shu'aib (3,650 m). Large-scale agriculture is practiced here, particularly of grapes, grain, fruits, and vegetables.

Map of Yemen

To the east, the mountains range mostly between 1000 m and 2000 m and are barren and rugged, but agriculture exists in the occasional wadi. In the area where the mountains meet the desert, or Empty Quarter, only grass and shrubs grow and Bedouin graze cattle, but further east, signs of life cease and sand dunes rule the landscape.

The rest of the country, extending to the Omani border, is almost completely desert, with less than 1 percent of the land under cultivation. Vast areas separate a few scattered settlements.

Yemen's easternmost and southernmost points lie on the distant island of Socotra, which lies closer to Somalia than to Yemen and is nearly the size of Rhode Island. Like many remote islands, Socotra has some unique flora and fauna; its name likely derives from a Sanskrit phrase meaning "island of bliss."

Besides the two countries that Yemen borders, it has near neighbors in Djibouti and Eritrea, African nations across the narrow Bab el Mandeb Strait at the southern end of the Red Sea.

History

Ancient kingdoms

Yemen is one of the oldest centers of civilization in the Middle East. Various ancient kingdoms developed between the ninth century B.C.E. and the fifth century C.E. in the rugged valleys between the central highlands and the desert. The famed Queen of Sheba is said to have ruled there, though other locations outside Yemen make the same claim. The source of these kingdoms' wealth and power was the spice trade, which also moved incense and gold overland by camel caravan to Mediterranean markets. The land centering on Yemen was known as Arabia Felix ("Fortunate Arabia") by the Roman Empire, which believed it held fabulous riches. The Romans made an unsuccessful attempt to conquer the area under Augustus Caesar, but later managed to break the Arabian control of the trade routes by finding sources for merchandise farther afield, mainly in India, and using waterways to get to them, which eventually brought the decline of the overland passage.

Arrival of Islam

Ethiopian Christians ruled the area for a short period in the 6th century C.E., but they were expelled by a Persian army that remained in power until the arrival of Islam in 628, the same year Muhammad re-entered Mecca in triumph. The emergence of Islam sparked an unprecedented spiritual revival in the region, profoundly changing and reshaping Yemen. The Persian governor was among the first to embrace Islam. Missionaries sent by Muhammad built Yemen's first mosques. In the next two centuries, Yemenis constituted a large part of the Islamic forces that swept through the Middle East and westward to Spain. They tended to excel as architects, administrators, and merchants even when they settled down far from their homeland.

Distant caliphates ruled over Yemen at times; at other times local Shi’a imamates held sway for centuries. The whole country, as it is known today, seldom remained united since different caliphs and imams often exerted control in the northern and southern areas.

Colonial period

With the European discovery of the sea route around Africa to India, Yemen quickly gained strategic importance to the European powers, first the Portuguese, later the British. The interests of the Europeans frequently clashed with Islamic rulers, including the emerging superpower of the Middle East, the Ottoman Turks, who occupied Yemen for nearly a century, beginning in 1538, until they were expelled.

During this period, Yemen again experienced a prosperous period with the world's discovery of coffee, the cultivation of which some believe began in southern Arabia. Yemen held a global monopoly on coffee production and trade and in time allowed British, Dutch, French, and later American trade missions and factories to be established on the Red Sea coast. Local coffee production declined steeply, though, after the colonial powers established plantations in other locations overseas.

Division into north and south

In 1729, a sultan precipitated the split between northern and southern Yemen that would last 260 years by gaining independence from the ruling imam. In an attempt to secure the trade route to India, the British occupied the port of Aden, overlooking the gulf of the same name, in 1839. This prompted the Turks to safeguard their interests along the Red Sea by retaking the northern part of Yemen in 1848. The border between the two regions of Yemen was fixed by the two powers in 1905.

The Turks withdrew with the collapse of the Ottoman Empire after World War I. The xenophobic imams that succeeded them in the north kept the area in civil war and dodged various assassination attempts even after rebel forces backed by Egypt drove the ruling dynasty into exile in 1962. In the south, centering on Aden, the British initially made peace with the tribes and created a protectorate. But in time, they found themselves fighting multiple liberation groups and hastily withdrew their forces in 1967, leaving power in the hands of a communist front. The resulting people's republic was the only declared communist state in the Arab world, which left it isolated from most other Arab countries.

Unification

Sana'a, the capital of Yemen

Unification of the two republics had been the declared goal of the two Yemens since the beginning. Ideological differences as well as the conflicting interests of Saudi Arabia (which backed the north) and the Soviet Union (which supported the south), however, made such a union seem impossible. A series of border clashes in the 1970s was followed in the 1980s with attempts on paper at unification, but no real developments came about until the collapse of the Iron Curtain in 1989. Before the end of that year, an agreement for a unity constitution was signed. In 1990, the Republic of Yemen was declared, with Sana'a as the capital and the north's President Ali Abdullah Saleh as the new head of state.

Difficulties persisted, however, between the regions of the new country. In 1994, open civil war erupted between north and south, a conflict that was won by the central government, which sent the southern leadership into exile.

In the twenty-first century, Yemen has been in the news mainly with the rise there of fundamentalist Islam, particularly in the south. This glaringly came to the world's attention with the suicide bombing attack on an American navy ship, the USS Cole, in Aden's harbor in 2000 by Al-Qaeda followers.

Economy

Development in a country where virtually no modern structures existed until the 1960s is a formidable task. The British had brought development to the area around Aden, but the rest of the country had no schools, administrative service, local currency or banking system, or health services. Electricity, modern communications, and water and sanitation systems were virtually non-existent. Goods in Yemen were transported on the backs of laborers and animals, and 90 percent of the people were engaged in subsistence agriculture.

The difficult terrain and lack of educated, qualified, and experienced personnel remain the main obstacles to Yemen's development. Hundreds of thousands of Yemenis found low-status employment in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states during the late 1970s and 1980s. The Gulf War forced the return home of at least 850,000 of them. Remittances from Yemenis working abroad have long contributed heavily to the country's economy. Substantial Yemeni communities exist in many areas of the globe, including the nation's Arab neighbors, Indonesia, India, East Africa, and also the U.K. and the U.S.

The western mountain slopes are the natural habitat of coffee, a crop that probably began its world career in Yemen. Other areas are also agriculturally productive. Large papaya, mango, and banana groves are found in the highland valleys, and citrus and watermelon plantations dot the countryside farther east. Where irrigation is available, dates and cotton grow well in the coastal region.

Yet Yemen imports more than 60 percent of its food, and about one out of five Yemenis suffer from malnutrition. Agriculture employs more than half the labor force, but only about 6 percent of the land is capable of cultivation.

Modest amounts of oil have been found in Yemeni territory since 1984, mainly in the desert east of Sana'a, enough not only to make the country an exporter of the resource but to account for nearly 90 percent of all exports in value. Pipelines run from the oilfields to ports on both the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. There are also natural gas reserves believed to be even larger than the oilfields they lie adjacent to.

Demographics

Unlike other people of the Arabian Peninsula who have historically been nomads or semi-nomads, Yemenis outside the cities live in small villages and towns and tend to stay put.

Most Yemenis belong to one of two principal Islamic religious groups: the Shi’a, found in the north and northwest, and the Sunni, who live predominately in the south and southeast. Many minority groups have departed over the decades and centuries, the best known being the "Yemenite Jews" who once formed a sizable community with a distinct culture and long history. Soon after the establishment of Israel, a massive airlift transported practically all Jews in Yemen, nearly 50,000, to their ancestral homeland in 1949 and 1950.

Arabic is the official language, although English is increasingly spoken, particularly in the two main cities. Other Semitic dialects rarely heard elsewhere are spoken in scattered sections of the country. One is Soqotri, the main language spoken on the outlying island of Socotra; it is most closely related to a tongue spoken in a small eastern area of the mainland and another in a remote area of Oman.

Socotra is the one part of Yemen where people of African descent are a majority of the populace. They tend to live near the coastline while those of Arab ancestry reside inland. There are more than 60,000 people living on the island.

Yemen has one of the world's highest birth rates; the average woman bears seven children. Although this is similar to the rates in nearby East Africa, it is roughly twice as high as that of Saudi Arabia and nearly three times higher than those in the more modernized Gulf states. More than half of Yemen's population is under 16 years of age.

Culture

One of Yemen's most prized art forms is the recitation of poetry in classical and colloquial styles. For centuries poetry has been spoken, sung, and also improvised during social events, at special performances, and in competition. Poetry events are also recognized as occasions where topics normally left untouched can be safely broached.

Khat plant

The chewing of khat, or qat, the leaves of a flowering shrub that grows locally, is practically a national pastime among the male population. The use of khat predates that of coffee and is used in similar social contexts. The juices of the leaves bring users slowly to a state of euphoria, stimulation, and sometimes sleeplessness. Khat-chewing sessions can last for hours after meals or in open forums where issues of the day are discussed. In sharp contrast to the opinions of the Saudi clergy, who strictly ban the substance, Yemeni authorities believe that it brings no harm to health or society. Only in Somalia is the use of the leaves more prevalent than in Yemen.

Yemen is basically a poor country, perhaps not as poor as its African neighbors but definitely not as prosperous as its fellow Arab nations. Part of the reason is that a rigid caste-like system rules the Yemeni social hierarchy, especially in areas of work. Those occupying the highest levels can all trace their lineage back to Muhammad. Those in the lower strata are poorly educated and have an indefinite genealogy. They engage in low-status occupations that in most cases are hereditary. Long-term male labor migration within and outside the peninsula has resulted in some changes in the traditional division of labor, since women have had to take over some male tasks, particularly in agriculture.

Notes

  1. Population Division of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs of the United Nations Secretariat, World Population Prospects, Table A.1 World Population Prospects: The 2008 Revision. Highlights (New York, NY: United Nations, 2009). Retrieved October 16, 2011.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 International Monetary Fund, Report for Selected Countries and Subjects: Yemen.

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