Cairo - Another protester was killed and some 50 others injured in Yemen on Thursday as street protests and unrest continued in countries in the Middle East and North Africa.
Thousands of anti-government protesters, who wanted Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh to follow Egypt's Hosni Mubarak to step down, clashed with police in Yemen's capital of Sanaa and southern port city of Aden on Thursday.
Anti-riot policemen fired warning shots on Thursday evening to break up a massive march of protesters in Aden, killing one protester and injuring about 10 others.
This brought the death toll of protests in the country since Wednesday to three. Anti-riot police's random gunfire killed two young protesters during fierce clashes in Aden on Wednesday.
In Sanaa, 40 protesters were injured on Thursday when some 3 000 anti-government protesters, mostly students, met pro-government backers. One policeman was seriously wounded when police tried to stop the clashes.
Hundreds of anti-government protesters also took to the streets in provinces of Al-Bayda, Al-Hodayda, Taiz, and Abyan.
In Egypt, the situation was still unfolding on Thursday. The ruling military council has ordered the arrest of three former ministers of interior, tourism and housing, as well as a former senior member of the ruling National Democratic Party, over corruption allegations.
The council also announced a travel ban on 43 members from the current and ex-government.
In New York, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Thursday welcomed the public commitment made by Egypt "to the holding of free and transparent elections."
"Those commitments must be fulfilled, there must be no turning back," he said.
The ruling Egyptian Supreme Council of the Armed Forces on Tuesday set a period of 10 days for the constitutional amendment committee to finish its task, while reaffirming it would hand over power within six months.
The council announced on Sunday that they will suspend the constitution, dissolve the parliament, and form a panel to draft a new constitution for the country before submitting it to a referendum.