The in-coming President Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi will be sworn in next week before the parliament and receive the Presidential palace from the former President Ali Abdullah Saleh, well-informed sources said.
Hadi who will run the state for the up-coming two years is expected to carry out constitutional, political, economic and financial reforms.
He will reconstruct the military and build up a modern and civil state, voters in Sana'a optimistically said during the election day on Tuesday.
Voters in most Yemeni provinces turned out in unexpectedly large numbers on February 21 to mark a formal end to the 33-year-rule of Saleh.
Officials of the Supreme Commission of Election and Referendum said turnout in Tuesday's vote for Vice President Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi exceeded 70 percent nationwide.
Separately, news reports said that the former President Ali Abdullah Saleh arrived in Sana'a Wednesday coming from the United Sates after receiving a treatment of burns suffered in an assassination attempt last June.
Sources of the General People Congress affirmed that Saleh would hand over the power to his successor in the mid of the next week in a formal ceremony, pointing out that Hadi will honor Saleh.
Saleh had agreed to cede power in a November deal that offered him immunity from prosecution following an uprising that broke out in February 2011.
Officials of United States, the European Union, the United Nations, Russia, Spain , the GCC states and other countries congratulated on Wednesday the people of Yemen on the current successful presidential election.
Despite optimism of the Yemeni voters, some ballot stations witnessed violence acts in Saada and Aden in which 11 soldiers and civilians were left killed.