BBC News with Jonathan Izard
也门总统30天内辞职,将享豁免权
Thousands of anti-government protesters in the Yemeni capital Sanaa say they don’t trust President Ali Abdullah Saleh to keep his promise to step down. Mr Saleh agreed on Saturday to hand over power to his deputy within 30 days, but the protesters say he must go immediately. Earlier the president told the BBC that al-Qaeda had infiltrated the opposition. From Sanaa, Lina Sinjab reports.
The opposition denied the president’s allegation. Younger Yemenis have been campaigning out in the country’s capital, demanding democratic change for months. They are not ready to accept any deal with the president they distrust and are demanding his immediate departure. Younger Yemeni activists say they are already planning to increase the number of demonstrations. It doesn’t look as if Yemen’s political crisis will end soon.
叙利亚南部25名示威者死亡 联合国呼吁停止暴力
Reports from Syria say security forces have once again opened fire on demonstrators, killing at least one person in the northwestern coastal town of Jabla. Syrian authorities are preventing international journalists from entering the country. Owen Bennett Jones reports from neighbouring Lebanon.
The latest video footage to come out of Syria shows continuing violence but with fewer people on the streets and sometimes, there are armed men in civilian clothing, sometimes walking alongside uniformed security personnel. Today’s violence follows the detention of people across Syria suspected of organising the protests. The official news agency has also been giving its account of what's been happening. It says five security personnel were killed by armed criminal gangs and 38 policemen injured in Saturday’s violence.