Yemen protesters have started removing tents from inside the Change Square in downtown the capital Sanaa in a move which comes just to reopen roads and help ease traffic jams and enable the citizens to resume their activities normally.
Wahid Ghalib, a youth activist at the square located outside Sanaa University, said some party has given orders to its followers who arrived in Sanaa from other provinces to remove their tents and spread the revolution to other provinces.
"Many tents have been removed so far from the edges of the Change Square, but there is no official arrangements by the youths or the parties to end the popular revolution," Wahid said. "It is just to reopen roads and save some expenses which have been allocated for the protesters," he continued. "It is time to arrange everything in a good way".
The organizational committee of the popular uprising, which erupted in early 2011, has stated that the youth-led protesters will continue to stay inside the square all goals of their revolution were met.
"No one can order to put an end to this square which remains the most important landmark for the concrete change in Yemen," the committee said in a statement, as removing tents continued to trigger public outrage.
In the meantime, all coalitions of the youth-led protesters, who have refused to leave their square until they see their demands practically met, are preparing for a meeting on June 18 with the ministerial committee and the dialogue liaison committee in charge with bringing the protesters to dialogue.
At the meeting, they will submit their vision to participate in a comprehensive national dialogue expected to be held in the few coming months according to a power-transfer deal, which was brokered by the GCC and backed by the UN in November.