<p>"After Mubarak, it's Ali's turn," chanted some of the estimated 4,000 protesters, mostly young students.<br /><br />The protesters then headed off towards Sanaa University, with some crying: "Get out, Get out Ali" and others chanting: "The people want the regime to fall."<br /><br />The protest began after an exchange between a group of students trying to put up an anti-regime poster and supporters of the ruling General People's Congress who tried to prevent them, according to witnesses.<br /><br />By midday (0900 GMT), the demonstrators had reached the Avenue Jamal Abdel Nasser, some 500 metres (yards) from Tahrir Square which was occupied by supporters of the ruling party.<br /><br />Yesterday, thousands of demonstrators took to the streets of Yemen's capital to celebrate the resignation of the Egyptian president, an AFP correspondent said.<br /><br />Several hundred protesters tried unsuccessfully to approach the Egyptian embassy, which was protected by a large police force, while others gathered in Al-Tahrir Square outside the seat of the Yemeni government.<br /><br />Yemeni security personnel were also out in force around the square, and elsewhere in the capital.<br /><br />Some demonstrators chanted slogans such as "Yesterday Tunisia, today Egypt, and tomorrow Yemenis will break their chains" and "The people want to overthrow the regime."<br /><br />Tens of thousands of demonstrators turned out on February 3 to protest against the rule of Saleh, who has been in power since 1978.<br /><br />An equal number of pro-regime demonstrators also took to the streets on the same day. The situation has since calmed, with the parliamentary opposition calling on the president to implement promised reforms.</p>
<p>"After Mubarak, it's Ali's turn," chanted some of the estimated 4,000 protesters, mostly young students.<br /><br />The protesters then headed off towards Sanaa University, with some crying: "Get out, Get out Ali" and others chanting: "The people want the regime to fall."<br /><br />The protest began after an exchange between a group of students trying to put up an anti-regime poster and supporters of the ruling General People's Congress who tried to prevent them, according to witnesses.<br /><br />By midday (0900 GMT), the demonstrators had reached the Avenue Jamal Abdel Nasser, some 500 metres (yards) from Tahrir Square which was occupied by supporters of the ruling party.<br /><br />Yesterday, thousands of demonstrators took to the streets of Yemen's capital to celebrate the resignation of the Egyptian president, an AFP correspondent said.<br /><br />Several hundred protesters tried unsuccessfully to approach the Egyptian embassy, which was protected by a large police force, while others gathered in Al-Tahrir Square outside the seat of the Yemeni government.<br /><br />Yemeni security personnel were also out in force around the square, and elsewhere in the capital.<br /><br />Some demonstrators chanted slogans such as "Yesterday Tunisia, today Egypt, and tomorrow Yemenis will break their chains" and "The people want to overthrow the regime."<br /><br />Tens of thousands of demonstrators turned out on February 3 to protest against the rule of Saleh, who has been in power since 1978.<br /><br />An equal number of pro-regime demonstrators also took to the streets on the same day. The situation has since calmed, with the parliamentary opposition calling on the president to implement promised reforms.</p>