Yemen Vice President Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi has threatened to unveil realities about Yemen's current situations, indicating that nothing of the GCC-brokered power transfer's provisions was implemented so far, an Emirate newspaper, Albyan, quoted well-informed Yemeni officials.
The newspaper said Hadi has recently chaired a committee tasked with following up the GCC deal, pointing out that he cited that his residence was subject to shooting by unidentified men several times.
The officials said Hadi showed a dire picture of Yemen's situations, pointing out that the capital is still divided into three parts, and oil and electricity lines are damaged
According to Albyan, Hadi complained Al-Qaeda control on some towns, saying that the army took no actions to prevent Al-Qaeda expansion.
Armed groups affiliated to Al-Qaeda calling itself as "the Islamic Jihad Group" took over last month Yemeni towns amid claims that Saleh's aides helped Al-Qaeda have a productive ground to grow and expand.
In the meeting , representatives of the General People Congress headed by Saleh could not justify the storm of some state newspapers by armed men loyal to regime, the newspaper added.
Under the GCC deal, Hadi is the consensus candidate of major parties in a presidential elections scheduled for February, while Saleh remains as a figurehead president for 90 days after he was forced to sign the deal.
After the elections, as GCC deal states, Hadi will oversee national dialogue to consider proposals for constitutional reforms that include replacing the presidential system with a multi-party parliamentary system.
Hadi is additionally tasked with presiding over the military commission, which operates to negotiate the demilitarization of the capital, Sana'a, and other cities.