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CORE DOCUMENT FORMING PART OF THE REPORTS OF STATES PARTIES
Republic of Yemen
GE.01-43838 (E) 161001 181001
I. LAND AND PEOPLE
A. Location and area
1. The Republic of Yemen is situated in the southern
part of the Arabian Peninsula between latitudes 12° and 19° N and
longitudes 43° and 52° E and covers an area of 555,000 km2 (not
including the Empty Quarter desert). It is bordered by the Kingdom
of Saudi Arabia to the north, the Arabian Sea and the Gulf of Aden
to the south, the Sultanate of Oman to the east and the Red Sea
to the west. The Bab al-Mandab straits, in the south-western part
of Yemen, are divided into two by the Yemeni island of Miyun (Perim),
which controls the approaches thereto.
2. The island of Suqutra in the Arabian Sea, which
is the largest of the Yemeni islands, is situated at a distance
of 510 km from the southern coast of Yemen and covers an area of
3,650 km2. There are also a number of small islands, such as Abd
al-Kuri, in the Arabian Sea and more than 112 Yemeni islands in
the Red Sea, the largest of which are the islands of Kamaran, Hanish
al-Kubra, Hanish al-Sughra, Zuqur, al-Zubair, Farasan and al-Tair.
The Yemeni coastline extends for more than 2,200 km from the Red
Sea in the west to the Arabian Sea and the Indian Ocean in the south.
3. Although the vast majority of Yemenis are Arabs,
a few of them are of African or Indian ethnic origin. Trade contributed
to this extremely slight ethnic diversity.
B. Religion
4. Islam is the religion of the State (article
2 of the Constitution). More than 99.7 per cent of Yemenis are Muslims,
divided into two main confessional groups, the larger of which adheres
to the Shafi’i school of law (one of the four Sunnite schools) while
the smaller group, living in some of the northern areas, adheres
to the Zeidi school of law (one of the Shi’ite schools). There is
also a population group adhering to the Isma’ili school of law (a
school with historical roots in Yemen which has many followers among
the Muslims of India where they are known as the Bohra community).
5. Yemen also has a Jewish minority, totalling
not more than 5,000 persons, who live in towns and villages in the
governorates of Amran and Sa’dah. This minority, which is of Yemeni
origin, was more numerous before a large number of its members emigrated
to Palestine.
6. All of the Christians in Yemen are foreigners
residing there for reasons attributable to their professional activity.
They enjoy freedom to engage in their religious observances either
at their places of work or at locations designated for that purpose.
C. Language
7. Arabic is the official language of the Republic
of Yemen (article 2 of the Constitution). It is also the language
of communication, education and information. The Mahra and Suqutri
languages are spoken by minorities living in the governorate of
Mahra in the easternmost part of
Yemen and on the island of Suqutra in the Indian Ocean. The Government
is making a considerable endeavour to study these languages, identify
their characteristics and preserve them. In recent years, English
has been taught more widely, particularly in private education.
D. Population
8. Yemen is the most densely populated country
in the Arabian Peninsula. This is largely due to natural circumstances
such as its fertile soil, its rainfall and Yemeni ingenuity in building
dams and dykes, as well as terraces on the mountain slopes, which
led to an expansion of the area of arable land. Over the centuries,
Yemen has constituted a human reservoir for most of the peoples
historically known as Arabs. Whenever environmental, political or
economic circumstances changed, there were migratory flows from
Yemen in various directions, particularly northwards.
9. Population censuses in the former Yemen Arab
Republic (northern Yemen) show that the total population increased
from 6.5 million persons in 1975 to 9.3 million in 1986 and about
10.6 million in 1998, i.e. a total increase of 3.7 million persons.
In the former People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen (southern Yemen),
the population increased from 1.6 million persons in 1973 to 2.34
million in 1988.
10. According to the population projections for
1998, the resident population of the Republic of Yemen amounted
to about 17,071,000 persons distributed among the 19 governorates,
in addition to the capital, and comprising 8,527,000 males (about
49.95 per cent) and 8,545,000 females (about 50.05 per cent). These
projections were based on the 1994 census.
11. The overall population density in the Republic
amounts to about 31 persons per km2 but varies from one governorate
to another depending on the topography.
12. The annual rate of natural population growth,
amounting to 3.7 per cent, is a high rate by international standards.

E. Fertility
13. In 1997, the overall fertility rate amounted
to 7.0 per cent in rural areas and 5.0 per cent in urban areas (i.e.
a mean average of 6.5 per cent).
14. Total fertility per thousand amounted to 221.0
in rural areas and 167.0 in urban areas (a mean average of 206.0).
| Rates
for 1997 |
Rural |
Urban |
Mean |
| Overall
fertility rate |
7.0 |
5.0 |
6.5 |
| Total
fertility (per thousand) |
221.0 |
167.0 |
206.0 |
| Crude birth
rate (per thousand) |
40.6 |
35.2 |
39.2 |
15.
Life expectancy at birth in 1998
| Gender |
Rural |
Urban |
Mean |
| Males |
56.6 |
58.5 |
57.5 |
| Females |
59.6 |
62.6 |
61.0 |
| Overall |
58.1 |
60.5 |
59.2 |
16.
Proportion of the population under 15 years of age in 1998
| Gender |
Rural |
Urban |
Mean |
| Males |
50.7 |
39.2 |
47.9 |
| Females |
46.7 |
42.8 |
45.9 |
| Overall |
48.7 |
40.8 |
46.9 |
| Urban/rural
distribution of the population (%) |
74.44 |
25.56 |
100 |
17.
Average age of the population in 1997
| Gender |
Rural |
Urban |
Mean |
| Males |
14.4 |
16.7 |
15.0 |
| Females |
15.3 |
17.0 |
15.7 |
| Overall |
14.9 |
16.8 |
15.4 |
18.
Infant mortality rate (per thousand)
| Gender |
Rural |
Urban |
Mean |
| Males |
90.4 |
67.0 |
85.2 |
| Females |
66.1 |
59.4 |
64.4 |
| Overall |
78.8 |
63.4 |
75.3 |
19.
Mortality rate (per thousand) among children under five years
of age in 1997
| Gender |
Rural |
Urban |
Mean |
| Males |
120.3 |
82.8 |
112.0 |
| Females |
102.9 |
77.0 |
97.1 |
| Overall |
112.0 |
80.0 |
104.8 |
20.
Overall mortality rate (per thousand) in 1997
| Gender |
Rural |
Urban |
Mean |
| Males |
12.9 |
10.3 |
12.2 |
| Females |
11.0 |
8.9 |
10.9 |
| Overall |
11.9 |
9.7 |
11.3 |
21.
Proportion of households headed by women
|
Proportion
of households headed by women |
Rural |
Urban |
Mean |
| 10.0 |
9.0 |
10.0 |
22.
Illiteracy rate (percentage) in 1998
| Gender |
Rural |
Urban |
Mean |
| Males |
34.99 |
20.55 |
31.25 |
| Females |
73.29 |
38.77 |
64.15 |
| Overall |
53.52 |
29.80 |
47.31 |

F. Education
23. The Yemenis suffered from ignorance, intellectual
stultification and isolation for many centuries until the outbreak
of the revolution in the former Yemen Arab Republic (northern Yemen)
on 26 September 1962 and in the former People’s Democratic Republic
of Yemen (southern Yemen) on 14 October 1963 when endeavours were
made to combat ignorance and illiteracy. The aim of education is
to train upright citizens eager to assert their rights of citizenship
and capable of assuming the responsibilities resulting therefrom;
to enable individuals to understand the natural, social and cultural
environment of their society in particular and of Arab and human
society in general; to develop their basic skills so that they can
transmit ideas and pursue scientific modes of thought and research;
to promote their sound development; and to improve their health
and their social and economic standards. The philosophy of education
focuses on achievement of the following objectives:
(a) Promotion of universal basic education, according
priority to deprived areas and categories;
(b) Development of general education in such a
way as to meet the needs of individuals and society in all fields;
(c) Expansion of the scope of basic education
services to include the provision of health services and academic
requisites;
(d) Development of scientific tendencies, originality,
objectivity and a critical spirit among children in order to endow
them with skills and abilities consistent with the level of their
intellectual and physical development and linked to their immediate
environment.
24. In view of the importance of education in everyday
life and for the country’s future, article 54 of the Constitution
stipulates that: “All citizens have a right to education which the
State shall safeguard, in accordance with the law, by establishing
various schools and cultural and educational institutions. Primary
education shall be compulsory and the State shall endeavour to eradicate
illiteracy and expand technical and vocational education. The State
shall also cater, in particular, for the welfare of the younger
generation by protecting it from delinquency, providing it with
a sound religious, intellectual and physical upbringing and creating
appropriate conditions for the development of its aptitudes in all
fields”.
25. The State is endeavouring to provide everyone
with equal educational opportunities, consistent with the wishes
of individuals and the needs of society, in accordance with comprehensive
socio-economic plans. By law, primary education is free and compulsory.
More schools are being constructed for primary education and students
are permitted to enrol at public schools from the ages of 5 to 10
so that a larger number of them can receive an education, particularly
in remote areas.
26. Following Yemen’s reunification, the duration
of compulsory primary education was increased from 6 to 9 years
and the kindergarten stage has been included in the education system
in order to teach children in the early years of their lives. The
Government has also encouraged the private sector to invest in pre-school,
primary, secondary and university education.
27. The educational statistics show that, during
the 1990s, the number of students enrolled for primary education
increased notably from about 2 million to 2.9 million, i.e. an increase
of 45 per cent. The enrolment rate in the first primary grade rose
to 100 per cent and the drop out rate decreased to 1.2 per cent.
This was also the case at the secondary level, in which the number
of students rose from 134,000 in the academic year 1990/91 to 376,000
in the year 1999/2000, i.e. an increase of about 180 per cent.
28. The educational statistics also show notable
growth in the number of females enrolled for primary education,
which increased from 516,000 in the academic year 1990/91 to about
980,000 in the year 1999/2000, i.e. an annual growth of about 19
per cent. Large increases were also noted in the number of female
students enrolled at the secondary level, which increased from just
over 20,000 in the year 1990/91 to more than 94,000 in the year
1999/2000. The achievements made in the field of female education
are illustrated by the fact that the number of females working in
the teaching profession increased from about 9,869 to 29,610 during
the same period, although this figure represented only 20 per cent
of the total number of teachers in the academic year 1999/2000.
29. Informal education programmes, covering the
first primary grade to the general secondary (pre-university) level,
have been organized for persons whose circumstances prevented them
from enrolling for formal education.
30. The aim of the technical education and vocational
training policies and programmes is to increase the number of persons
enrolled at technical and vocational colleges to more than 12 per
cent of the number of students enrolled for secondary education
(trainees are permitted to enrol at these colleges after completing
their 9-year primary education). There are currently 26 such colleges
and training institutions, distributed among the various governorates
of the Republic, which employ 960 teachers who provide instruction
and training in specialized fields such as electrical engineering,
electronics, mechanical engineering (vehicles and agricultural equipment),
production mechanics, structural engineering, finishing, carpentry,
the hotel and tourist trades, agriculture and veterinary medicine.
Development of education during
the period 1990-1999
|
Academic
year
|
Number
of schools |
Number
of students |
Number
of teachers |
| 1990/91
|
10
746 |
2
041 074 |
54
864 |
| 1999/2000 |
14
661 |
3
335 214 |
150
290 |
G. Economic indicators
31. In 1998, the gross national product amounted
to 638.145 billion rials.
32. The Yemeni economy depends primarily on agricultural
and fishing activities, followed by government services, the extraction
industries, transport, storage and communications. All of these
sectors were developed considerably during the period 1990-1999.
33. This period can be divided into two parts:
(a) The period 1991-1994, which was characterized
by evident economic difficulties insofar as the gross domestic product
declined, the average rate of growth amounted to 1 per cent, the
public budget recorded a large deficit equivalent to 16.7 per cent
of GDP in 1994 and the balance of payments deficit amounted to 13
per cent of GNP;
(b) The period 1995-1999, which began with a series
of remedial economic measures consisting in economic, financial
and administrative reform programmes designed to achieve, inter
alia:
(i) Positive growth rates;
(ii) A reduction in the rate of inflation;
.
(iii) Equilibrium in the balance of payments.
34. These programmes had clearly beneficial effects
for the national economy insofar as the average growth rate of GNP
increased to 6.5 per cent and the deficit in the balance of payments
declined from 13 per cent to 2 per cent of GNP.

II. STRUCTURE OF THE SYSTEM OF GOVERNMENT IN THE REPUBLIC OF YEMEN
A. The political system
35. The Republic of Yemen is an Arab Islamic State
with a republican system of government. Article 1 of its Constitution
stipulates that: “The Republic of Yemen is an independent and sovereign
Arab Islamic State”.
36. Yemen has a democratic parliamentary political
system, comprising features of the presidential and parliamentary
systems, the principal characteristics of which are as follows:
(a) Yemen is a constitutional, republican, united
(single as opposed to federal or confederated) Arab Islamic State;
(b) Yemen is a democracy which practises multiparty
political pluralism as the basis for peaceful sharing and transfer
of authority;
(c) Authority is based on the concept of sovereignty
of the people, who are the holders and the source of authority,
which they exercise directly through referendums and public elections,
and indirectly through legislative and executive bodies and elected
local councils;
(d) The State’s international relations are based
on recognition of, and compliance with, the Charter of the United
Nations, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Pact of
the League of Arab States and all the generally recognized rules
of international law (article 6 of the Constitution);
(e) The economic system is based on freedom of
economic activity and operates in accordance with objective legal,
administrative and procedural principles which ensure social justice,
the development of production, social equilibrium, equality of opportunity,
fair competition between the various economic sectors, and respect
for private property;
(f) The State’s social system is based on the
family, which is sustained by religion, morality and patriotism,
and on society, which is sustained by mutual support and solidarity
which, in turn, are based on justice, freedom and equality;
(g) All citizens are equal before the law, without
any discrimination among them in regard to their rights and obligations;
(h) The system of government is based on the principle
of the separation of powers and cooperation between them;
(i) Yemen recognizes the principle of judicial
review and amendment of the Constitution in accordance with specific
conditions and procedures.
37. Since the reunification of Yemen in 1990, the Yemeni people
have enjoyed legislative and legal safeguards following the abolition
of the laws that were in force during the period when the country
was split into two halves. The system of government in the Republic
of Yemen is based on the principle of separation of legislative,
executive and judicial powers, each of which protects human rights
by complying strictly with the laws regulating such protection.
In addition to the fact that government is based on sovereignty
of the people and separation of powers, the principal internal safeguards
of human rights in the Republic of Yemen also include the establishment
of a Supreme Court which monitors the constitutionality of legislation,
recognition of the right to form political parties and trade unions,
freedom of the press, and the fact that laws are formulated in a
manner that does not derogate from human rights.
B. The legislative authority
38. The legislative authority is the body entitled
to promulgate the binding rules which govern the behaviour of persons
within the territory of the State. Under the Yemeni Constitution,
the right to promulgate legislation is vested in the House of Representatives,
which constitutes the legislative authority, although recognition
is also given to the system of referendums among the electorate,
in its capacity as the body in which sovereignty is inherently vested,
on important issues as happened in the case of the referendum on
the Constitution of the Republic of Yemen, which was held on 15
and 16 May 1991, and the referendum on the latest constitutional
amendments, which was held on 20 February 2001.
C. The House of Representatives
39. The enactment of legislation and approval of
the general policy and plans of the State, including its socio-economic
development plan and its budget and final accounts, are among the
functions of the House of Representatives, which also monitors the
acts of the executive authority in the manner specified in the Constitution
(art. 62).
1. Composition of the House of Representatives
40. The Constitution adopts the system of a unicameral
House, all the members of which are elected by the people. Article
63 of the Constitution stipulates that: “The House of Representatives
shall consist of 301 members freely elected on the basis of universal,
equal and direct suffrage by secret ballot. The Republic shall be
divided into electoral constituencies the population of which shall
be equal in number within a range of plus or minus 5 per cent. One
member shall be elected from each constituency”.
2. Eligibility for membership of the House of Representatives
41. Article 64 (a) of the Constitution of the Republic
of Yemen stipulates that the members of the House of Representatives
must meet the following conditions:
(a) They must be Yemenis;
(b) They must be over 25 years of age;
(c) They must be literate;
(d) They must be of commendable character and
conduct, must fulfil their religious obligations and must not have
been convicted of an offence prejudicial to honour or integrity
under the terms of a final court judgement unless they have subsequently
been restored to good standing.
3. Term of the House of Representatives
42. Article 65 of the Constitution stipulates that:
“The House of Representatives shall be elected for a term of six
Gregorian calendar years beginning on the date of its first meeting.
The President of the Republic shall call upon the electorate to
elect a new House at least 60 days before the expiration of its
term. If this is precluded by circumstances of force majeure, the
existing House shall continue to exercise its constitutional authority
until the said circumstances no longer apply and a new House has
been elected.”
4. Principal organs of the House of Representatives
43. (a) The Speaker of the House: At its first
meeting, the House elects, by an absolute majority vote among its
members, a Speaker and the members of the Presidium. The voting,
by secret ballot, takes place at a public meeting and, in the case
of the Speaker, is for a single candidate. The Speaker of the House
presides over its meetings, represents the House in its contacts
with other bodies, speaks on its behalf in accordance with its wishes
and supervises all its work, as well as the work of all its organs;
(b) The Presidium: The Presidium, consisting of the Speaker of the
House and his three deputies, constitutes the House’s standing body.
It is answerable to the House for all its activities and exercises
the powers assigned to it under the terms of the Constitution and
the Bylaws of the House, particularly in regard to supervision of
the activities of the House and its committees and assisting those
committees in the performance of their tasks; (c) The Committees:
The House establishes standing committees to assist it in the discharge
of its legislative, monitoring and steering functions. The work
is divided among them in accordance with their fields of specialization.
The great importance that is attached to these committees stems
from the fact that they focus on specific fields and, therefore,
can undertake a thorough and meticulous study of matters falling
within the scope of their field of activity. By virtue of the freedom
granted to the members of the House to join one or more committees
to the activities of which they can contribute, the work of these
committees is characterized by a certain degree of flexibility and
vitality. The committees constitute the core of the House, since
their task is to study the matters or bills of law referred to them
and to submit appropriate recommendations, which have a fundamental
influence on the House’s decision making. Each committee consists
of 10 to 15 members. The present House of Representatives has 19
such standing committees, which are listed below:
(i) The Constitutional and Legal Affairs Committee;
(ii) The Development, Petroleum and Mineral Resources
Committee;
(iii) The Trade and Industry Committee;
(iv) The Financial Affairs Committee;
(v) The Education Committee;
(vi) The Higher Education, Youth and Sports Committee;
(vii) The Electricity, Water, Construction and
Urban Planning Committee;
(viii) The Environment and Public Health Committee;
(ix) The Communications and Transport Committee;
(x) The Agriculture, Fisheries and Water Resources
Committee;
(xi) The Manpower and Social Affairs Committee;
(xii) The Foreign Affairs and Expatriates Committee;
(xiii) The Justice and Awqaf (Religious Endowments)
Committee;
(xiv) The Committee on the Codification of the
Principles of the Islamic Shari’a;
(xv) The Defence and Security Committee;
(xvi) The Local Administration Committee;
(xvii) The Information, Culture and Tourism Committee;
(xviii) The Petitions and Complaints Committee;
(xix) The Public Freedoms and Human Rights Committee;
(d) The Secretariat: This is the executive organ
of the House which conducts its technical, administrative and financial
affairs and implements the directives of the Presidium. It consists
of a Secretary-General and an Assistant-Secretary-General, who are
appointed by the President of the Republic on the basis of a recommendation
by the Presidium of the House.
5. Functions of the House of Representatives

44. The House of Representatives discharges the following three
functions:
(a) A political function: This consists in monitoring
the acts of the executive authority and directing the policy of
the Government through its expression or withdrawal of confidence
therein. This political function also includes the right to call
to account, investigate, interpellate and move for a withdrawal
of confidence, if necessary;
(b) A legislative function: This intrinsic function
of the House of Representatives includes approval of the bills of
law referred to it by the Government or proposed by members of the
House. The legislative process passes through three stages: (i)
proposal; (ii) deliberation and voting; (iii) approval and promulgation;
(c) A financial function: This is one of the most
important functions assigned to the House of Representatives under
the terms of the Constitution. It includes:
(i) Approval of the State’s public budget (art.
88 (a));
(ii) Approval of the final accounts (art. 91);
(iii) Approval of treaties, taxes and loans (art.
92).
45. Two parliamentary elections have been held.
The first, held on 27 April 1993, was fought by 22 of the 40 licensed
political parties and the number of candidates amounted to 1,226
from political parties and organizations and 1,940 independents
from all parts of the Republic. The proportion of registered voters
who actually voted amounted to 90.83 per cent. The fact that only
two women were elected, which is a very small proportion in comparison
with the number of male members of the House of Representatives,
is attributable to the inherited social traditions in which the
Yemeni people have been brought up. The second parliamentary election,
held on 27 April 1997, were fought by 12 political parties and organizations.
A large number of international and local observers helped to monitor
both elections, which were conducted in a democratic manner as attested
by all.
46. During the first decade of its existence, the
Republic of Yemen had three Houses of Representatives:
(a) The Transitional House of Representatives
for the period from 22 May 1990 to
27 April 1993, which consisted of members of the Consultative Council
of the Former Yemen Arab Republic (159 members) and members of the
Supreme People’s Council of the former People’s Democratic Republic
of Yemen (111 members), together with 31 other members consisting
of eminent political and social personalities appointed by the Presidium;
(b) The House of Representatives for the period
from 27 April 1993 to 27 April 1997, all the members of which were
elected directly by the people (301 members);
(c) The House of Representatives for the period
from 27 April 1997 to 27 April 2001, all the members of which were
elected directly by the people (301 members).
D. The executive authority
47. In the Yemeni political system, the executive
authority is composed of two separate organs: the Presidency and
the Government, consisting of the Council of Ministers. The executive
authority is exercised on behalf of the people by the President
of the Republic and the Council of Ministers within the limits laid
down in the Constitution (art. 105).
1. The Presidency of the Republic
48. Prior to its amendment in 1994, the Constitution
of the Republic of Yemen had adopted the principle of a collective
Presidency, consisting in a Presidential Council composed of five
members, which continued until 1994 when the Constitution was amended
by the House of Representatives after the collective Presidency
was found to be ineffective. Following that constitutional amendment
on 28 September 1994, the Presidency of the Republic has consisted
of a President and a Vice-President appointed by the President.
49. The conditions to be met by candidates for
the post of President of the Republic, as stipulated in article
107 of the Constitution, are as follows: he must be Yemeni, born
of Yemeni parents, and must not be under 40 years of age; he must
enjoy his political and civil rights; he must be of commendable
character and conduct and must practise Islamic observances; he
must not have been convicted of an offence prejudicial to honour
or integrity under the terms of a final court judgement unless he
has subsequently been restored to good standing; he must not be
married to a foreign woman, nor may he marry a foreign woman during
his term of office.
2. Manner of assumption of, and functions assigned
to,
the Presidency of the Republic
50. Article 108 of the Constitution stipulates
that the nomination and election of the President of the Republic
shall be as follows:
(a) Candidatures shall be submitted to the Speaker
of the House of Representatives;
(b) The candidatures shall be examined, in order
to ensure that the nominees meet the constitutionally stipulated
conditions, at a joint meeting of the presidiums of the House of
Representatives and the Consultative Council;
(c) The names of the candidates who meet the conditions
shall be presented at a joint meeting of the House of Representatives
and the Consultative Counsel for nomination. Each candidate for
the post of President of the Republic must be nominated by at least
5 per cent of the total number of members attending the meeting.
Nomination shall be by direct secret ballot;
(d) The joint meeting shall be required to nominate
at least three persons for the post of President of the Republic
so that their names can be submitted to the people in competitive
elections, in which the number of nominees must not be less than
two;
(e) The President of the Republic shall be chosen
by the people in competitive elections;
(f) The person who obtains an absolute majority
of the votes cast in the election shall become the President of
the Republic. If none of the nominees obtains such a majority, a
second electoral round shall be held, in accordance with the same
above-mentioned procedures, between the two nominees who obtained
the largest number of votes cast.
3. Term of the presidential mandate
51. Article 112 of the Constitution stipulates
that: “The term of office of the President of the Republic shall
be seven Gregorian calendar years beginning on the date on which
he takes the constitutional oath. No one may assume the office of
President for more than two seven-year terms.”
52. It is not permissible to combine the office
of President of the Republic with other occupations, since direction
of the helm of government is a full-time task. Accordingly, article
118 of the Constitution stipulates that, during his term of office,
the President of the Republic shall not engage, even indirectly,
in a liberal profession or a commercial, financial or industrial
activity, nor shall he purchase or lease any property of the State,
even through a public auction, or rent, sell or barter to the State
any of his own property. Article 117 of the Constitution further
stipulates that the salary and allowances of the President of the
Republic shall be determined by law and he shall not receive any
other emolument or remuneration.
53. This bipolarity of executive authority in the
parliamentary or mixed system means that political responsibility
is borne by the Government and not by the President of the Republic
who, in his capacity as head of State, symbolizes the country’s
sovereignty and independence and, therefore, his personal immunity
can be lifted only if so requested by half of the members of the
House of Representatives and he can be impeached, by a majority
decision of two thirds of the members of the House, only if he commits
high treason, violates the Constitution or acts in a manner detrimental
to the country’s sovereignty and independence. There are legally
prescribed procedures for impeachment of the President. If both
the President and his Vice-President were impeached, the Presidium
of the House of Representatives would temporarily assume the functions
of the Presidency of the Republic until the court handed down its
judgement. If either of them were convicted, he would be removed
from office in accordance with the Constitution without prejudice
to any other penalties. None of the offences referred to in article
128 of the Constitution are subject to any statute of limitations.
4. Functions and powers of the President of the
Republic
54. Article 119 of the Constitution specifies the tasks and functions
assumed by the President of the Republic, which can be classified
as follows:
(a) In the political and administrative field:
(i) Formulation of the general policy of the State in collaboration
with the Government and supervision of its implementation;
(ii) Instructing the person concerned to form a
Government and issuing a presidential decree naming its members;
(iii) Inviting the Council of Ministers to attend
a joint meeting with the President of the Republic whenever necessary;
(iv) Appointment and dismissal of senior civilian
and military officials of the State, in accordance with the law;
(v) Calling a public referendum;
(b) In the legislative field:
(i) Calling upon the electorate, at the scheduled
time, to elect the House of Representatives;
(ii) Calling upon the elected House of Representatives
to hold its first meeting (article 70 of the Constitution);
(iii) The right to ratify bills of law approved
by the House of Representatives and to promulgate decrees and implementing
regulations pertaining thereto;
(iv) The right to promulgate laws, in the sense
that the promulgation of laws by the President of the Republic is
equivalent to the issue of a “birth certificate” for such laws;
(v) The right to object to bills of law, in the
sense that the President of the Republic is entitled to request
reconsideration of a bill of law that has been approved by the House
of Representatives, in which case he must refer it back to the House
of Representatives, stating the reasons for his decision, within
30 days from the date on which it was submitted to him. If he fails
to refer it back to the House within that time limit or if, having
been referred back to the House, it is once again approved by a
majority of the members of the House, it is deemed to be enactable
and must be promulgated by the President of the Republic within
two weeks. If he fails to do so, it is deemed to have been constitutionally
enacted without the need for promulgation;
(vi) The right to dissolve the House of Representatives.
This right is vested in the President of the Republic in his capacity
as such. However, the Constitution makes the exercise of this right
conditional on the holding of a popular referendum on the justification
for such dissolution. The Constitution further stipulates that the
electorate must be called upon to elect a new House of Representatives
within 60 days from the date of promulgation of the decision to
dissolve the House. Moreover, a House may under no circumstances
be dissolved during its first session (article 101 of the Constitution);
(c) At the international level:
The President of the Republic enjoys extensive
powers at the international level. Since he represents the State
at home and abroad, he is always kept informed of international
events through the regular reports submitted to him by Yemeni diplomatic
missions abroad and through his direct relations with the leaders
of various States (article 119 (a) of the Constitution). The President
of the Republic is also empowered to establish diplomatic missions
and appoint ambassadors to other States and to welcome, and receive
the credentials of, ambassadors appointed in Yemen (article 119,
paragraphs 14 and 15, of the Constitution). In addition, the President
of the Republic ratifies agreements which have been approved by
the Council of Ministers and which do not need to be approved by
the House of Representatives and he issues decrees ratifying agreements
and treaties that have been approved by the House of Representatives
(article 119, paragraphs 12 and 13, of the Constitution);
(d) With regard to the armed forces:
Being responsible for protecting the country’s
safety, independence and territorial integrity, the President of
the Republic is the Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces. The
Constitution specifies some of his functions in this field as follows:
(i) The President of the Republic is the Commander
in Chief of the Armed Forces (article 111 of the Constitution);
(ii) The President of the Republic appoints the
members of the National Defence Council (article 119, paragraph
7, of the Constitution);
(iii) He establishes military ranks in accordance
with the law (article 119, paragraph 10, of the Constitution);
(iv) He awards the medals and decorations provided
for by law and authorizes the wearing of decorations awarded by
other States (article 119, paragraph 11, of the Constitution);
(e) Exceptional powers:
In the event of the country being exposed to dangers
that might threaten its security and territorial integrity, the
President of the Republic has an obligation to take appropriate
measures to counter them by, inter alia, proclaiming a state of
emergency by presidential decree. The House of Representatives must
be convened in order to consider the said proclamation within seven
days from the date on which it is issued. If the House had been
dissolved, the former House would be reconvened in accordance with
the Constitution. If the House were not convened, or if the proclamation
were not submitted to it for consideration, the state of emergency,
which would be of limited duration, would be terminated and could
be extended only with the approval of the House of Representatives.
At all events, a state of emergency can be proclaimed only for important
reasons such as the outbreak of war, internal civil strife or natural
disasters (article 121 of the Constitution);
(f) In the judicial field: The President of
the Republic exercises functions of a judicial nature, including:
(i) Promulgation of a presidential decree appointing
the president, vice president and members of the Supreme Court of
the Republic on the basis of a recommendation by the Supreme Council
of the Judiciary;
(ii) Ratification of death sentences, which can
be carried out only after their ratification by the President of
the Republic, who has the right to grant a pardon if he believes
that the interests, security and stability of the country so require.

E. The Consultative Council
55. In the former Yemen Arab Republic, a 15-member
Consultative Council was formed, under the terms of a presidential
decree promulgated in 1989, to study internal and external issues
affecting the country’s higher national interests. The agreement
proclaiming the Republic of Yemen and regulating the transitional
period stipulated that the Presidential Council would issue, at
its first meeting, a decree forming a 45 member Consultative Council.
After the reunification in 1990, the Consultative Council was formed
in accordance with a decree promulgated by the Presidential Council.
In its present form, the Consultative Council is one of the constitutional
institutions the structures and functions of which have been developed,
in accordance with the constitutional amendment on which the referendum
was held on 20 February 2001, with a view to expanding the scope
of advisory participation and benefiting from the specialized technical
expertise available in the various parts of Yemen. The functions
of the Consultative Council, which comprises 111 members, are specified
in articles 125 127 of the Constitution and a number of committees,
including the Human Rights and Public Freedoms Committee, are formed
within its framework.
F. The constitutional provisions
regulating the composition of the Government and specifying its
tasks and functions
56. Article 129 of the Constitution stipulates
that: “The Council of Ministers shall constitute the Government
of the Republic of Yemen. It shall be the highest executive and
administrative authority in the State to which all the State’s executive
departments, agencies and institutions, without exception, shall
be subordinate.”
57. The Government consists of the Prime Minister,
the Deputy Prime Ministers and the Ministers who together constitute
the Council of Ministers which discharges its functions collectively.
In this way, the Government plays an important political role in
the study and formulation of policy. The Ministers are the heads
of the ministerial departments, for which they are responsible,
and, consequently, exercise considerable administrative authority.
Before the Prime Minister and the Ministers assume their functions,
they must take the constitutional oath before the President of the
Republic. The number of Ministers may vary from one Government to
another depending on the requirements of the situation, as well
as technical needs and political considerations. Article 137 of
the Constitution summarizes the functions of the Government as follows:
“The Council of Ministers shall be responsible for the implementation
of the general policy of the State in the political, economic, social,
cultural and defence fields in accordance with the laws and decrees.”
The Council of Ministers (Government) endeavours to protect rights
and freedoms, through the faithful implementation of the laws promulgated
by the House of Representatives, in collaboration with some governmental
and non-governmental institutions which are directly engaged in
activities to protect human rights. This clearly shows that the
executive authority is responsible for protecting human rights as
part of its task of ensuring the implementation of the laws and
regulations.
1. Appointment of the Government
58. The Yemeni Constitution adopts the method followed
in the parliamentary system by empowering the President of the Republic
to select the Prime Minister, as can be seen from article 119 of
the Constitution. The Prime Minister, in turn, is empowered to select
his Ministers in consultation with the President of the Republic
and to seek a vote of confidence in the Government in the light
of a manifesto which he submits to the House of Representatives
(article 132 of the Constitution).
59. Article 131 of the Constitution stipulates
that: “The Prime Minister, his Deputies and the Ministers must meet
the conditions of eligibility for membership of the House of Representatives,
with the further proviso that none of them shall be under 30 years
of age, with the exception of the Prime Minister who shall not be
under 40 years of age”.
2. Inadmissibility of combining a ministerial function
with other work
60. Article 136 of the Constitution stipulates
that: “During the discharge of their ministerial functions, the
Prime Minister and the Ministers shall not assume any other public
office nor shall they engage, even indirectly, in a liberal profession
or a commercial, financial or industrial activity. They shall not
participate in contracts awarded by the Government or public institutions
and shall not combine their ministerial function with membership
of the board of directors of any company and, during their term
of office, shall not purchase, sell, lease or barter, even through
a public auction, any property of the State or rent, sell or barter
to the State any of their own property.”
3. Functions of the Government
61. Article 137 of the Constitution defines the
functions of the Government as follows: “The Council of Ministers
shall be responsible for the implementation of the general policy
of the State in the political, economic, social, cultural and defence
fields in accordance with the laws and decrees and, in particular,
shall exercise the following functions:
(a) Participation, together with the President
of the Republic, in the formulation of the broad outlines of internal
and foreign policy;
(b) Preparation of the State’s draft economic
plan and annual budget, control of the implementation thereof, and
preparation of the State’s final accounts;
(c) Preparation of draft legislation and decisions
for submission to the House of Representatives or the President
of the Republic, as appropriate;
(d) Approval of treaties and agreements prior
to their submission to the House of Representatives or the President
of the Republic, as appropriate;
(e) Adoption of the measures needed to preserve
the internal and external security of the State and to protect the
rights of its citizens;
(f) Direction, coordination and monitoring of
the activities of Ministries, administrative agencies, public institutions
and bodies and the public and mixed sectors, in accordance with
the law;
(g) Appointment and dismissal of senior officials,
in accordance with the law, and formulation and implementation of
policies to develop the technical human resources of government
agencies and train manpower, in accordance with the country’s needs,
within the framework of the economic plan;
(h) Monitoring the implementation
of laws and protecting State property;
(i) Supervision of the organization and administration
of the monetary, credit and insurance systems;
(j) The contracting and granting of loans within
the limits of the State’s general policy and the provisions of the
Constitution.”
The Council of Ministers Act No. 20 of 1991 adds
the following functions:
(a) The Council of Ministers shall be responsible
for the implementation of the general policy of the State in all
fields in a manner consistent with the Constitution, the laws and
the decrees of the President of the Republic and shall have the
final word in all matters relating to the implementation of general
policy;
(b) Without prejudice to the prerogatives of the
President of the Republic, the Council of Ministers shall implement
the State’s foreign policy and undertake the overall supervision
of its relations with other States, taking care to maintain mutual
respect and common interests. It shall endeavour to develop these
relations in a manner conducive to the interests of the Republic
of Yemen and shall formulate the rules and principles that govern
and regulate the activities of diplomatic, economic, social and
cultural bodies in relation to other States and international organizations
so that they can be submitted to the President of the Republic for
approval and monitoring of compliance therewith;
(c) The Council of Ministers shall take the measures
needed to guarantee strict application of the provisions of the
Constitution and the law and to ensure that its subordinate central
and local government agencies, as well as all public institutions
and other facilities, conduct their activities in accordance with
the Constitution and the law;
(d) The Council of Ministers shall approve the
draft decrees and regulations needed to implement legislation and
regulate public agencies and departments prior to their submission
to the President of the Republic for promulgation. The Council of
Ministers shall also issue, and ensure the implementation of, decrees
and orders which it is empowered to issue or which are in accordance
with the legislation, its implementing regulations and the decrees
of the President of the Republic. Such decrees, orders and regulations
shall be enforceable in all parts of the Republic;
(e) The Council of Ministers shall have the right
to annul, modify or suspend the implementation of decisions taken
by Ministers or the executive organs of local councils if they are
contrary to the law or inconsistent with the policy of the State
with a view to ensuring that they are implemented in a more appropriate
manner;
(f) With regard to the exercise of control functions,
all the Ministries and agencies, including public organizations
and institutions and local authorities which are subordinate to
the Council of Ministers shall provide the Prime Minister with periodic
reports on their activities in financial, economic, administrative,
developmental, commercial, security, military and other fields,
on the progress made in the implementation of the general plan,
on the extent to which the legislation, decrees and regulations
in force are being applied and on the activities of political parties,
organizations, trade unions and professional associations in order
to ensure that the requisite information on the implementation of
the State’s general policy and on the tasks and plans of the Government
are made available in good time so that they can be submitted to
the Council of Ministers.
4. Functions and powers of the Prime Minister
62. The Council of Ministers Act No. 20 of 1991
defines the functions and powers of the Prime Minister as follows:
(a) The Prime Minister shall direct the work and
chair the meetings of the Council of Ministers;
(b) The Prime Minister shall schedule, and draw
up the agenda of, the meetings of the Council of Ministers, sign
the decrees and orders that it issues and represent it in all internal
and external matters relating to the implementation of the State’s
policy and falling within the constitutional and legal jurisdiction
of the Council of Ministers;
(c) The Prime Minister shall represent the Council
in all internal and external matters relating to the implementation
of the State’s policy and shall sign the decrees and orders issued
by the Council and falling within its constitutional and legal jurisdiction;
(d) The Prime Minister shall supervise the implementation
of the regulations, decrees and orders issued by the President of
the Republic, as well as the decrees and orders issued by the Council
of Ministers, and shall coordinate the work of the central and local
agencies of the State;
(e) In matters relating to the discharge of the
functions of the Council of Ministers, the Prime Minister shall
have the right to issue binding orders to Ministers, provincial
governors and heads of central and local agencies of the State and
to require them to submit reports on the discharge of their functions;
(f) The Prime Minister shall have the right to
suspend the implementation of decisions taken by Ministers, provincial
governors or the heads of central and local agencies of the State
if they are inconsistent with the State’s policy. He shall submit
such suspension orders, together with a statement of the reasons
therefor, within one month to the Council of Ministers, which shall
be empowered to approve, modify or annul such orders;
(g) In exceptional circumstances in which there
is a need to implement the State’s general policy, the Prime Minister
may take decisions or issue orders, in accordance with or pursuant
to laws and presidential decrees, before they have been approved
by the Council of Ministers. He shall submit them to the Council
of Ministers at its next meeting and they shall be deemed null and
void if the Council fails to approve them. The criteria and rules
regulating this empowerment are clearly defined in the implementing
regulations;
(h) Powers of attorney may be issued, under the
signature of the Prime Minister, for any members of the Council
of Ministers to initial agreements which need to be concluded, in
the public interest, with other States or international or regional
bodies or organizations.
5. Functions and powers of members of the Council
of Ministers
63. The Council of Ministers Act No. 20 of 1991
defines the functions and powers of members of the Council of Ministers
as follows:
(a) Without prejudice to any of the powers vested
in the Prime Minister under the terms of the Constitution and the
laws in force, the Deputy Prime Ministers shall assist him in the
discharge of his functions. The implementing regulations shall specify
their respective functions and powers, with due regard for the powers
vested in any one of them under the terms of the decree forming
the Government;
(b) The members of the Council of Ministers shall
exercise the functions and powers assigned to them, each member
of the Council being individually answerable for the actions undertaken
in his field of jurisdiction. All the members of the Council shall
be jointly answerable for the actions of the Ministers and shall
have an obligation to implement the general policy of the State
in accordance with the laws defining their fields of jurisdiction.
They shall all be answerable and accountable to the Council of Ministers
and the President of the Republic. The Ministers shall be answerable
to the Prime Minister in respect of their exercise of their respective
functions and powers;
(c) The members of the Council of Ministers shall
have an obligation to take the decisions and measures needed to
discharge the functions assigned to them in their respective fields
of jurisdiction in accordance with the Constitution, the law, the
decrees and regulations promulgated by the President of the Republic
and the decisions taken by the Council of
Ministers. They shall also have an obligation to direct and supervise
the implementation of the decisions that they take and to develop
and train technical human resources and manpower within the framework
of the agencies that they are supervising;
(d) The members of the Council of Ministers shall
submit proposals concerning the Council’s agenda and work plan in
accordance with principles, rules and criteria laid down in its
rules of procedure;

(e) The members of the Council of Ministers shall coordinate among
themselves on matters which require such coordination and shall
endeavour to settle matters on which there is controversy, pending
which they shall submit their differing viewpoints, in clear and
comprehensive written form, to the Prime Minister;
(f) The members of the Council of Ministers may
submit any urgent matter falling within their field of jurisdiction
to the Prime Minister, requesting his opinion and guidance thereon,
in a written memorandum giving a detailed presentation of the matter
in question and their viewpoints thereon;
(g) The members of the Council of Ministers shall
inform the Prime Minister or the Council of major occurrences and
violations of the regulations or policy of the State, as well as
anything that impedes or prevents the implementation of laws or
decrees, in their respective fields;
(h) The members of the Council of Ministers shall
discharge their respective functions and responsibilities, as defined
in the decree forming the Government or the decrees under the terms
of which they were appointed. Each of them shall also assume the
functions and powers legally vested in members of the Council of
Ministers and shall carry out the tasks and functions assigned to
him in his capacity as a member of the highest authority.
6. Vote of confidence in the Government and responsibilities
of Ministers
64. Within a maximum of 25 days from the date of
formation of the Government, the Prime Minister must submit the
Government’s manifesto to the House of Representatives for a majority
vote of confidence. If the House is not in regular session, the
President of the Republic must convene it for an extraordinary session.
The members of the House, as a whole, have the right to comment
on the Government’s manifesto. The Government’s failure to obtain
the required majority is deemed equivalent to a withholding of confidence
(article 86 of the Constitution).
65. The members of the Council of Ministers exercise
the functions and powers assigned to them, each member of the House
being individually answerable for the actions undertaken in his
field of jurisdiction. All the members of the House are jointly
answerable for the actions of the Ministers, by which they are bound
and in respect of which they are accountable to the House of Representatives
and the President of the Republic. The Ministers are answerable
to the Prime Minister in respect of their individual exercise of
the functions and powers vested in them
for the discharge of the tasks assigned to each Ministry. Each Minister
supervises the affairs of his Ministry, directs its central and
branch administrations in all parts of the Republic and must implement
the Government’s general policy in his Ministry in accordance with
the laws, regulations and decrees in force.
7. Meetings of the Council of Ministers
66. The Council of Ministers holds one regular
meeting every week and may be convened for extraordinary meetings,
if necessary, in the manner stipulated in its rules of procedure.
To attain a quorum, meetings of the Council of Ministers must be
attended by a majority of its members. Decisions are taken by a
majority vote among the members present, the chairman having a casting
vote in the event of a tied vote. All the members of the Council
of Ministers have an obligation to act in accordance with the decisions
taken by the Council.
8. Relationship with the President of the Republic
67. The Council of Ministers must provide the President
of the Republic with periodic reports on the progress of its work
and must also present the reports, information, data or studies
requested by the President of the Republic. The President of the
Republic may also convene the Council of Ministers for a meeting
under his chairmanship to discuss the country’s situation or other
urgent matters.
9. The local councils
68. Article 145 of the Constitution stipulates
that the territory of the Republic of Yemen shall be divided into
administrative units the number, boundaries and subdivisions of
which, as well as the manner of nomination and selection of their
heads, shall be specified by law.
69. The administrative units (governorates and
districts) enjoy corporate personality, each having a local council
which is freely elected on the basis of direct and equal suffrage.
These councils propose programmes, plans and investment budgets
for their administrative units and are empowered to supervise, control
and call to account the organs of the local authority. The Constitution
also adopts the principle of administrative and financial decentralization
as the basis of the system of local administration (article 147
of the Constitution).
70. Each administrative unit and local council
constitutes an integral part of the State authority, the provincial
governors being accountable and answerable to the President of the
Republic and the Council of Ministers. The manner of control of
the actions of local councils is determined by law. The Local Authority
Act No. 4 of 2000 contains textual provisions that regulate the
activities, powers and financial resources of the local councils
and executive organs in the administrative units, as well as the
procedure for the control of their actions and the procedure for
their dissolution.
71. The first elections to the local councils in
the country’s governorates, which were held in February 2001, added
a new element to the democratic structure in Yemen.
G. The judicial authority
72. The judicial authority is responsible for interpreting
and applying the law in the various disputes brought before it.
The independence of the judiciary, which constitutes a basic safeguard
for the rights and freedoms of citizens and is also an essential
requirement for preservation of the rule of law, inspires people
with confidence in the impartiality of the judiciary and the legitimacy
of the political system.
73. The judiciary is a legally, financially and
administratively independent authority the organs of which include
the Department of Public Prosecutions. All disputes and offences
are adjudicated by the courts, the judges of which are independent
and, in their administration of justice, subject to no authority
other than the law. No one is permitted to interfere in any way
in lawsuits or other judicial affairs, such interference being deemed
a punishable offence in respect of which legal proceedings are not
subject to any statute of limitations (article 149 of the Constitution).
74. The organs and functions of the judiciary are
regulated by the Judicial Authority Act No. 1 of 1991. Citizens
have the right to apply to the judiciary and its courts for legal
redress in accordance with article 51 of the Constitution, which
stipulates that: “Citizens shall have the right to apply to the
judiciary to protect their legitimate rights and interests. They
shall also have the right to submit complaints, criticisms and proposals,
either directly or indirectly, to the agencies and institutions
of the State.”
75. The judicial system in Yemen comprises the
following:
• The Supreme Council of the Judiciary;
• The courts;
• The Department of Public Prosecutions;
• The Judicial Inspection Authority;
• The Ministry of Justice.
1. The Supreme Council of the Judiciary
76. The Supreme Council of the Judiciary endeavours
to ensure that the safeguards enjoyed by judges in regard to appointment,
promotion, dismissal, transfer, retirement and separation from service
are applied in accordance with the Judicial Authority Act No. 1
of 1991. It is the body empowered to discipline judges and members
of the Department of Public Prosecutions in the event of any breach
of their official duties. It formulates the general policy in regard
to development of the judiciary, studies bills of law concerning
the judiciary and also studies and approves the draft budget of
the judiciary. However, the Council is not a judicial body and,
therefore, no directives can be issued by it, or in its name, to
the courts or judges in connection with cases which have been referred
to them or in which judgements have been handed down, nor is it
an administrative or executive organ in the name of which administrative
or executive directives concerning judges can be issued.
2. The courts
77. The courts consist of the following:
• The Supreme Court;
• The courts of appeal;
• The courts of first instance.

The courts are the judicial bodies competent to adjudicate in all
disputes and offences. Their fields of competence and geographical
jurisdiction are defined by law.
(a) The Supreme Court
78. The Supreme Court, which is the highest judicial
body in the Republic of Yemen and sits in the capital Sana’a, consists
of a President, one or more Vice-Presidents and an adequate number
of judges, their number being determined at the time of formation
of the Court, and whenever necessary thereafter, under the terms
of a decree promulgated by the Minister of Justice in consultation
with the President of the Court after the Supreme Council of the
Judiciary has granted its approval. The members of the Court are
appointed by a decree issued by the President of the Republic on
the basis of a recommendation from the Supreme Council of the Judiciary.
The Supreme Court exercises the following functions.
Verification of the constitutionality of legislation,
bill of law, regulations and decrees; adjudication in jurisdictional
disputes between judicial bodies; adjudication in election contests;
adjudication in appeals against final judgements which have become
enforceable; and judicial control of all the courts in the Republic.
79. The Supreme Court, which enjoys financial and
administrative autonomy, comprises Constitutional, Civil, Commercial,
Criminal, Personal Status, Administrative, Military and Appeal Divisions
the composition of which is determined by the Supreme Council of
the Judiciary. Each Division has a bench consisting of five judges,
with the exception of the Constitutional Division which has seven
judges. Decisions and judgements are handed down by absolute majority.
(b) The courts of appeal
80. The courts of appeal, being constituted as
and when required, are not restricted in number. They are competent
to hear cases in which appeals are permitted by law, as well as
other cases in which they have jurisdiction under the terms of any
other legislation. Their judgements can be challenged before the
Supreme Court.
(c) The courts of first instance
81. The courts of first instance constitute the
courts of primary jurisdiction, the judgements of which can be challenged
before the courts of appeal. There are specialized courts which
hear cases involving public property, traffic offences and commercial
matters, etc. Yemeni law prohibits all forms of special courts,
such as State security courts. Juveniles are tried in accordance
with the Juveniles Act.
3. The Department of Public Prosecutions
82. This is the body entrusted with the defence
of society. It investigates offences, collects evidence, indicts
offenders, institutes criminal proceedings and monitors court procedures
and the enforcement of court orders and judgements in criminal matters.
It is also responsible for inspecting detention centres and prisons
in order to ensure that their inmates are being detained in a lawful
manner.
The Attorney General
83. The Attorney General is responsible for instituting
criminal proceedings on behalf of society. He does so in person,
or through his assistants, in collaboration with the members of
the Department of Public Prosecutions unless otherwise explicitly
stipulated. The members of the Department of Public Prosecutions
are subject to the provisions of the Judicial Authority Act in the
same way as other members of the judiciary, particularly in regard
to conditions of appointment, transfer, assignment, rights and obligations,
prohibitions and immunities, supervision, inspection, control, accountability
and discipline, unless otherwise explicitly stipulated.
4. The Judicial Inspection Authority
84. This body, which is an organ of the Ministry
of Justice, monitors and evaluates the competence and conduct of
judges. It is empowered to receive complaints against judges and
has an obligation to keep the administration of justice under surveillance
and to submit to the Minister of Justice any proposals that it deems
appropriate in this regard. It must inform the judges concerned
of anything noted against them. The Judicial Inspection Authority
is not regarded as a judicial body, since it does not have the right
to issue directives or orders to the courts concerning cases brought
before them, nor does it have the right to do so when conducting
unannounced inspections. Such inspection is a technical function
that relies on access to legal records, information and documents
which reflect the work of the judiciary and enable the inspectors
to evaluate a judge’s ability to understand the substantive and
procedural rules laid down in legal texts and to apply them properly
to the facts of the case when adjudicating in disputes. This evaluation
is carried out by monitoring judgements and decisions after they
have been handed down. In other words, judicial inspection is based
solely on legal judgements and procedures in cases which have already
been heard and adjudicated by a judge. Its purpose is to evaluate
his competence and not to supervise the administration of justice
in cases which are being heard.
5. The Ministry of Justice
85. This is the executive agency which endeavours
to serve and develop the judicial bodies in such a way as to ensure
that they discharge their function of administering justice and
protecting the legitimate rights of the people by providing all
the technical, financial and administrative services and facilities
needed by the courts and the judges working therein. The Ministry
is not a judicial body and, therefore, does not interfere in judicial
business, nor does it issue any directives or orders to the courts
in connection with cases brought before them.
86. Candidates for posts in the judicial authority
are required to meet the following conditions:
(a) They must be Yemeni citizens enjoying full
legal capacity and must be free from disabilities that might affect
their administration of justice;
(b) They must not be under 30 years of age and
cannot assume a judicial function until they have completed a minimum
of two years’ training in the judicial sphere;
(c) They must have obtained a diploma from the
Higher Judicial Institute after being awarded a university degree
in Islamic and positive law or in jurisprudence from a recognized
university in or outside the Republic of Yemen;
(d) They must be of good conduct, standing and
reputation and must not have been convicted of an offence prejudicial
to honour or integrity.
6. Independence of the judiciary
87. The Judicial Authority Act No. 1 of 1991 emphasizes
that the judiciary is an independent authority. This is also confirmed
in article 149 of the Constitution, which stipulates that: “The
judiciary shall be a legally, financially and administratively independent
authority, the organs of which shall include the Department of Public
Prosecutions. All disputes and offences shall be adjudicated by
the courts, the judges of which shall be independent and, in their
administration of justice, subject to no authority other than the
law. No one shall be permitted to interfere in any way in lawsuits
or other judicial affairs, such interference being deemed a punishable
offence in respect of which legal proceedings shall not be subject
to any statute of limitations.” The independence of the judiciary
is a firmly established and essential prerequisite for the achievement
of justice in society. If the judiciary were not independent, there
could be no justice. If government is to be based on justice, justice
itself must be based on an independent judiciary.
7. Guarantee of the impartiality of the judiciary
88. In order to guarantee the impartiality and
independence of the judiciary, the Judicial Authority Act No. 1
of 1991 stipulates that it is prohibited for judges to engage in
commerce or to combine their judicial function with any other function
or activity that would be incompatible with the duties of a judge
or the independence and honour of the judiciary. Before assuming
his duties, anyone who is appointed to a post in the judicial authority
is required to submit a list of the financial assets and real property
that he owns and this list is reviewed every year by the competent
authority in the Supreme Council of the Judiciary. It is prohibited
by law for judges to disclose confidential deliberations and every
person appointed to a post in the judicial authority is required
to take the oath before assuming his duties.

8. Immunity of judges
89. The immunities enjoyed by judges include the
following:
(a) Judges can be dismissed from office only if
they are convicted in an impeachment action in accordance with the
provisions of the Judicial Authority Act;
(b) Except in cases of flagrante delicto, a judge
can be arrested or held in preventive detention only with the permission
of the Supreme Council of the Judiciary, which is empowered to authorize
his continued detention or order his release with or without bail;
(c) Criminal proceedings can be brought against
judges only if so authorized by the Supreme Council of the Judiciary
at the request of the Attorney-General. The court before which the
judge would be tried would be designated by the Supreme Council
of the Judiciary.
H. The legal system under which human rights are
protected
1. Rights and freedoms guaranteed by the Constitution
of the Republic of Yemen
90. The purpose of the Yemeni revolution was to
guarantee and protect the human rights of the Yemeni people and,
to this end, legislation has been promulgated, plans have been formulated,
policies have been implemented and numerous national institutions
and non governmental organizations have been established. These
public rights and freedoms include the right to life, the right
to security, the right to own property, the right to work, freedom
of belief and worship and freedom of opinion and expression, etc.
The numerous rights and freedoms guaranteed by the Constitution
of the Republic of Yemen include the following:
(a) The right of citizenship: This is an inherent
human right which entitles a person to enjoy other rights. Anyone
who is deprived of this right would become stateless and would lack
legal protection. Accordingly, no Yemeni citizen may under any circumstances
be stripped of his nationality (article 44 of the Constitution),
or extradited to a foreign authority (article 45 of the Constitution);
(b) The right to equality: This is a basic human
right which implies legal equality, political equality and the equal
right to vote and stand as a candidate for public office provided
that the conditions of eligibility therefor are met. All citizens
are equal before the law and in regard to their public rights and
obligations (article 41 of the Constitution); the State guarantees
equal opportunities for all citizens in the political, economic,
social and cultural spheres (article 24 of the Constitution); and
every citizen has the right to participate in political, economic,
social and cultural life (article 42 of the Constitution);
(c) The right to a stable and secure life: No one may be deprived
of his liberty except under the terms of a judgement handed down
by a competent court and no one may be arrested, searched or detained
except in cases of flagrante delicto or by order of the Department
of Public Prosecutions or a court judge in accordance with the provisions
of the law (article 48 of the Constitution). In order to safeguard
personal liberty, any citizen who is arrested must be brought before
a court within 24 hours from the time of his arrest and has the
right to summon his lawyer to attend the examination, as well as
the right to notify his relatives or other persons concerned. If
he is sentenced to imprisonment by a competent court, his human
dignity must be preserved and he must not be subjected to torture
or other forms of harm, nor may he be detained in places other than
those designated for that purpose (article 48 of the Constitution);
(d) The right to protection of privacy: The Constitution guarantees
the inviolability of the homes, property and honour of citizens.
It is prohibited to search homes or place them under surveillance
(article 52 of the Constitution);
(e) The right to freedom of expression: Citizens have the right
to state their views by every available means, whether verbally,
in writing or through publication or assembly, in the manner that
they believe will express their opinions or positions (article 42
of the Constitution);
(f) The right to freedom and confidentiality of communication: It
is prohibited to censure, delay or disclose the confidential content
of postal, telegraphic or telephone communications except where
otherwise provided by law (article 53 of the Constitution);
(g) The right to education: The State guarantees the right of all
its citizens to education through the establishment of educational
institutions and the creation of appropriate conditions for education,
which is compulsory at the primary stage (article 54 of the Constitution);
(h) The economic and social rights and freedoms of citizens: Like
political rights and freedoms, the purpose of economic and social
rights and freedoms is to secure the resources or benefits that
every citizen needs in order to guarantee a decent life for himself
and his dependants. One of the Government’s most imperative duties
is to endeavour to overcome the difficulties that prevent citizens
from enjoying these rights. The right to work, the right to free
choice of employment, the right to own property and the right to
social justice are the principal individual rights and freedoms
in the economic and social fields. The State has an obligation to
promulgate legislation in order to protect producers and consumers,
ensure the availability of basic commodities for citizens, prevent
monopoly and encourage private capital to invest in the various
fields of socio-economic development in accordance with the law.
91. The Constitution recognizes the right to engage in private economic
activity and to own property in a manner that is not detrimental
to the public interest. It is stipulated that the principles on
which the national economy is based include “the protection of private
property, which may be expropriated only in the public interest
and in return for fair compensation in accordance with the law (article
7 (c) of the Constitution). Article 20 of the Constitution further
stipulates that general confiscation of property is prohibited and
limited confiscation is permitted only under the terms of a court
order.
2. International conventions to which Yemen has acceded
92. Yemen has been among the first States in the
region to ratify international human rights instruments. The former
northern and southern halves of Yemen signed a number of conventions
which the Republic of Yemen inherited after the proclamation of
reunification on 22 May 1990. These conventions, with the dates
of accession or ratification, are as follows:
(a) General instruments in the field of international human rights
law:
(i) The Universal Declaration of Human Rights;
(ii) The International Covenant on Economic, Social
and Cultural Rights (9 February 1987);
(iii) The International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights (9 February 1987);
(b) Conventions concerning the prevention of discrimination:
(i) The International Convention on the Elimination
of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (18 October 1972);
(ii) The International Convention on the Suppression
and Punishment of the Crime of Apartheid (17 August 1987);
(c) Conventions concerning torture, genocide,
war crimes and crimes against humanity:
(i) The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment
of the Crime of Genocide (9 February 1987);
(ii) The Convention on the Non-Applicability of
Statutory Limitations to War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity
(9 February 1987);
(iii) The Convention against Torture and Other
Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (5 November
1991);
(d) Conventions concerning women:
(i) The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms
of Discrimination against Women (30 May 1984);
(ii) The Convention on the Political Rights of
Women (9 February 1987);
(e) Conventions concerning children:
(i) The Convention on the Rights of the Child (1
May 1991);
(f) Conventions concerning marriage, family and
youth:
(i) The Convention on Consent to Marriage, Minimum
Age for Marriage and Registration of Marriages (9 February 1987);
(g) Conventions concerning international humanitarian
law:
(i) The Geneva Convention for the Amelioration
of the Condition of the Wounded and Sick in Armed Forces in the
Field (16 July 1970);
(ii) The Geneva Convention for the Amelioration
of the Condition of Wounded, Sick and Shipwrecked Members of Armed
Forces at Sea (16 July 1970);
(iii) The Geneva Convention relative to the Treatment
of Prisoners of War (16 July 1970);
(iv) The Geneva Convention relative to the Protection
of Civilian Persons in Time of War (16 July 1970);
(v) The Protocol Additional to the Geneva Conventions
of 12 August 1949, and relating to the Protection of Victims of
International Armed Conflicts (Protocol I) (17 April 1990);
(vi) The Protocol Additional to the Geneva Conventions
of 12 August 1949, and relating to the Protection of Victims of
Non-International Armed Conflicts (Protocol II) (17 April 1990);
(h) Conventions relating to slavery, servitude,
forced labour and similar institutions and practices:
(i) The 1953 Protocol amending the Slavery Convention
of 1926 (9 February 1987);
(ii) The Convention for the Suppression of the
Traffic in Persons and of the Exploitation of the Prostitution of
Others (6 April 1989);
(i) Conventions concerning refugees:
(i) The Convention relating to the Status of Refugees
of 1951 (18 January 1980);
(ii) The Protocol relating to the Status of Refugees
(18 January 1980).
3. National institutions for the protection of human rights

93. (a) The Public Rights and Freedoms Committee of the Consultative
Council:
This Committee, attached to the former Consultative Council which
was modified in accordance with the recent fifth amendment to the
Constitution, plays an advisory role in the protection and promotion
of human rights, press freedom and civil organizations and has investigated
cases and incidents relating to human rights, particularly in prisons;
(b) The Public Rights and Freedoms Committee of
the House of Representatives: This Committee, which is one of the
standing committees of the House of Representatives, plays an important
role in the ratification of international human rights instruments.
It is responsible, inter alia, for ensuring that the national legislation
promulgated by the House is consistent with the obligations imposed
by international conventions. It is competent to look into human
rights issues and investigate any violations that might occur and
is also empowered to question the Government and call it to account
for any alleged violations of human rights.
(c) The Grievances Committee of the House of Representatives:
This Committee, which is one of the standing committees of the House
of Representatives, plays an important role in addressing and discussing
grievances relating to human rights. Its functions include examination
of the complaints submitted to it and the investigation of any violations
that might occur. In its capacity as a parliamentary body, it is
empowered to question the Government and call it to account for
any alleged violations of human rights;
(d) The Higher National Human Rights Committee: Since the establishment
of the Republic of Yemen on 22 May 1990, the Government has shown
concern for human rights and public and private freedoms, as illustrated
by the Constitution and other legislation which it has promulgated.
This concern has also been reflected in its rapid signature and
ratification of international and regional instruments and conventions
concerning human rights. Responsibility for human rights matters
was vested in a number of governmental bodies until 1997, when a
governmental committee known as the “Committee on Political and
Civil Human Rights” was established by decision of the Prime Minister.
94. Believing in the importance of human rights,
the Yemeni Government established a Higher National Human Rights
Committee to replace the Committee on Civil and Political Human
Rights under the terms of Presidential Decree No. 20 of 1998, as
amended by Decree
No. 92 of 1999. Both decrees sought to ensure that the largest possible
number of governmental bodies directly concerned with human rights
questions and issues, as well as non-governmental organizations
and prominent social personalities, were represented on the Committee.
Both decrees also specified the Committee’s functions and working
methods in the light of the organizational structure and statutes
of the Committee and its subcommittees. The new Committee is chaired
by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Foreign Affairs or,
in his absence, by the Director of the Office of the President of
the Republic. The Committee’s membership includes Ministers and
heads of departments concerned with human rights questions and issues,
such as the Minister of the Interior, the Minister for Social Insurance
and Social Affairs, the Minister for Legal and House of Representatives’
Affairs, the Minister of Justice, the Minister for Labour and Vocational
Training, the Minister of Information, the Attorney-General, the
head of the Judicial Inspection Authority and the head of the Central
Political Security Agency. The composition of the Committee is currently
being discussed with a view to the inclusion of the Minister of
State for Human Rights, a new portfolio that was added during the
governmental restructuring in April 2001.
1. Functions and responsibilities of the National
Committee
95. The Presidential Decree establishing the Higher
National Committee and promulgating its statutes specified the following
principal functions to be assumed by the Higher Committee and its
Standing Subcommittee:
(a) Formulation of policies, plans and programmes to safeguard human
rights in the Republic of Yemen and strengthen the role of the bodies
responsible for protecting human rights in general, and handling
issues relating thereto, in accordance with the Constitution, the
laws in force and the international conventions and instruments
which our country has ratified;
(b) Supervision of the sound and proper implementation
by the national authorities concerned of international conventions
and instruments relating to human rights;
(c) Support and encouragement of non-governmental
organizations operating in the field of human rights in our country;
(d) Supervision of the preparation of the periodic
reports submitted to international organizations by the national
authorities concerned on the extent to which the international human
rights conventions and instruments which our country has ratified
are being implemented;
(e) Receipt and study of letters, notes and communications
from various international personalities, organizations and institutions
concerned with human rights and the submission of individual replies
thereto in accordance with the rules and principles laid down by
the Higher National Committee in this regard;
(f) Collection and documentation of all international
conventions, instruments and covenants, as well as other details
and information concerning human rights-related fields and activities;
(g) Submission of views and comments on laws,
instruments, conventions and reports concerning human rights;
(h) Study of reports received from international
human rights organizations with a view to expressing an opinion
thereon and replying thereto;
(i) Preparation of the requisite studies, reports
and analyses on human rights issues in our country and the proposal
of appropriate solutions and ways to address problematic aspects
thereof;
(j) Supervision of the preparation and implementation
of activities illustrating our country’s participation in, and celebration
of, events commemorating the achievements that the international
community has made in the field of human rights.

2. Structure of the Higher National Human Rights Committee
96. The Higher National Committee consists of the
following:
(a) A Higher Committee;
(b) A Standing Subcommittee;
(c) An Advisory Body;
(d) A Technical Secretariat;
A. The Higher Committee
97. The Higher Committee includes among its members
the heads of the governmental departments concerned with human rights,
represented by the following:
The Minister for Foreign Affairs Chairman
The Director of the Office of the President of
the Deputy Chairman Republic
The Minister for Legal and House of Representatives’
Affairs Member
The Minister of Justice Member
The Minister of Information Member
The Minister for Labour and Vocation Training
Member
The Minister for Social Insurance and Social Affairs
Member
The Minister of the Interior Member
The Attorney-General Member
The head of the Central Political Security Agency
Member
The head of the Judicial Inspection Authority
Member
The General Coordinator Member
(b) The Standing Subcommittee
98. The Standing Subcommittee, which is chaired
by the General Coordinator of the Higher National Committee and
includes among its member two permanent representatives of the above
mentioned departments, is an executive committee the composition
of which is determined by the Chairman of the Higher National Committee,
which has a Technical Secretariat to organize and monitor its functions
and activities.
(c) The Advisory Body
99. The 30 member Advisory Body consists of social
and academic personalities concerned with, or working in, fields
relating to human rights who are appointed by decision of the Prime
Minister on the basis of a proposal from the Higher National Human
Rights Committee. The task of the Advisory Body is to submit its
views and advice on human rights matters referred to it and to help
to formulate policies, plans and programmes for the protection and
promotion of human rights.
(d) Working methods of the Higher National Committee
100. Yemen is among the first States to ratify
international human rights instruments. Accordingly, the Higher
National Human Rights Committee is responsible for monitoring the
fulfilment of Yemen’s obligations arising from the international
instruments that it has signed. The Committee also closely monitors
the human rights situation in Yemen in order to prevent any violation
of those rights. It conducts its work through regular or extraordinary
meetings organized by the Standing Subcommittee which, in turn,
constitutes a permanent workshop that addresses every issue referred
to it in any field relating to human rights.
(e) Measures for the protection of human rights
101. Freedom to establish non governmental organizations,
trade unions and civil institutions; freedom of the press; and the
establishment of a human rights fund into which voluntary contributions
can be paid to help to solve human rights related problems.
(f) Non governmental human rights organizations
102. Following the establishment of the Republic
of Yemen in 1990, which ushered in an era of democratization and
active civil institutions, the number of non governmental organizations
and institutions engaged in activities relating to the protection
and promotion of human rights in general or focusing on a particular
field, such as political, civil, economic or cultural rights or
protection of the rights of a specific section of society, such
as women, children or the disabled, increased considerably and currently
amounts to about 2,000.

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