By Mohammed al-Kibsi
Member of British House of Lords, Baroness
Emma Nicholson and two Yemeni ministers escaped an assassination attempt when
some militants affiliated to the Yemeni Southern Movement randomly fired machine
guns at a vehicle boarding the Baroness and two Yemeni female ministers in Aden
city on Tuesday, said security and local sources from Aden.
The baroness was accompanying the Yemeni minister of human
rights Horya Mashhour and minister of state Jawharah Hassan to observe the
presidential elections.
Eye witnesses said that unidentified militants fired machine
guns at the motorcade of the baroness and that her vehicle was hit by at least 4
bullets.
However security sources affirmed that the Baroness and the
two ministers were not hurt.
The security forces fired back at the attackers and forced
them to runaway.
Local sources from Aden said that tens of militants affiliated
to the Southern movement were deployed to Aden city in an attempt to foil the
presidential elections.
The militants fired to the air so as to scare citizens and
ban them from going to the elections centers. At least two kids were killed in
Aden by the militants.
The head of the security committee of the Yemeni Elections
and Referendums Commission judge Saba al-Haji affirmed that the elections were
successful and that at least 80% of the voters turned out to the balloting
centers to cast their voices. However he said that the elections were halted in
9 constituencies five of the in Dale province, three in Lahj province and one
in Abyan province due to disturbance created by extremist militants.
Later on the day local sources affirmed that the Southern
Militants forced at least 16 percent of the balloting centers in Aden to close
down.
Some other violent events broke out in Shabwa province, and
in Hadrmout province where the Southern movement militants clashed with the
security forces in an attempt to foil the presidential elections.
Over ten million eligible Yemeni voters are expected to take
part in the presidential elections to elect the sole candidate AbduRabu Mansour
Hadi as a president of Yemen after President Saleh signed a GCC brokered deal
to end the crisis in Yemen.
Baroness Emma Nicholson was head of the EU Commission for
Observing Yemen’s Presidential elections in 2006.
She arrived in Yemen last week to take part in observing the
early presidential elections to elect Hadi as a president of Yemen.
Emma Nicholson was appointed to the House of Lords in 1997.
She is a member of the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Human Trafficking and
speaks regularly on health care and education in the Middle East and Eastern
Europe. Nicholson is also the Executive Chairman of the Iraq Britain Business
Council, an organisation which facilitates business and trade investment in
Iraq. Between 1999 and 2009 she was a member of the European Parliament, where
she served on the Foreign Affairs Committee. Whilst there, she generated
controversy through her strong opposition to international adoptions, which she
believed had become a market and subject to corruption. The Romanian government
implemented legislation to control the practice of de facto adoption as a
result, in part, of her pressure.
Nicholson spent a decade in the Commons before gaining
elevation to the peerage. For much of this time, she was a Conservative, only
switching her allegiance to the Liberal Democrats in 1995 after declaring her
disillusionment with the Tories. Before joining the latter party – and quickly
gaining the position of Spokesperson for Overseas Development and Human Rights
– Nicholson was a Parliamentary Private Secretary to Michael Jack, aiding him
at the Treasury (1995), Ministry of Agriculture (1993-95) and Home Office
(1992-93). She entered the Commons in 1987 as the MP for Devon West and
Torridge. She had previously been vice-chairman of the party and director of
fundraising at Save the Children. She joined the charity in 1974 after spending
thirteen years working for a computer company, where she was a software
designer and systems analyst. Nicholson was born in 1941.
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