Six years ago, in 11 February 2011, a peaceful, popular youth revolution erupted in Yemen – similar to other Arab Spring revolutions that swept other Arab countries – as an inevitable necessity to unseat a desolate
Six years ago, in 11 February 2011, a peaceful, popular youth revolution erupted in Yemen – similar to other Arab Spring revolutions that swept other Arab countries – as an inevitable necessity to unseat a desolate
I welcome Turkey’s women who stood against the failed coup on 15 July. I welcome all women who are struggling for rights and freedoms in different areas of life.
The human rights activist and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Tawakkol Karman delivered a speech at the side-event "The effect of political conflict on the human rights condition in the Arab Spring countries",
Ladies and Gentlemen, Today, we celebrating the sixth anniversary of the glorious February Revolution while we have been more determined to build a new Yemen based on principles of citizenship, democracy and the rule of law.
It is an honor to be at the Oxford Union, one of the most respected associations situated in the oldest, most prestigious University town of Oxford in the world.
Dear Ladies and gentlemen, I am pleased, at the outset, to express my overwhelming joy to be here with you who are brave,
Not a day passes when the world does not make a progress in all areas. We can see it clearly through inventions, scientific discoveries, mega projects, major benefits gained as a result of exploitation of natural resources and human energies.
First of all, I am happy to be with you here in Warsaw, the capital of revolution, which inspires the change and the global spring.
Farea Al-Muslimi: Hey, welcome everyone. I guess we are live. One second before that—if you are...
We meet today within the framework of the Women’s Progress Dialogue—an initiative that does not...
Yemenis, men and women everywhere,Peace be upon you. Peace be upon Greater Yemen. Peace be upon...