He joined the National Liberation Front in 1963 as the Local Committee founder in Mukalla, and went underground in 1965 | Al-Beidh fled to the neighboring after the secession failed |
---|---|
Jonsson, Gabriel, Towards Korean reconciliation: socio-cultural exchanges and cooperation, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd | South Yemen movement [ ] After fifteen years of living in Salim al-Beidh resumed his political career on the eve of the 19th anniversary of the |
Busky, Donald, Communism in history and theory: Asia, Africa, and the Americas, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2002, page 74• This came amid highly escalating tensions in the south, with clashes and violence between protesters and Yemeni security forces.
19Unification and Civil War [ ] Following the unification of with the in 1990, he took up the position of vice-president in the transition government of unified Yemen | After independence he joined the YSP |
---|---|
Ali Salim al Beidh, 1990 In office 22 May 1990 — 6 May 1994 President Chairman of the Presidential Council Prime Minister Preceded by Position created Succeeded by Vice President Personal details Born 1939-02-10 10 February 1939 age 82 , now Political party Children Faisal, Adnan, Hani, Nayef, Yanoof, Amani, and Tamani | In a coup that took the lives of anywhere from 4,000 to 10,000 people, al-Beidh was one of the few high-ranking officials who survived |
Political offices Preceded by Office created 1990—1994 Succeeded by as.
20