Ali Salem al-Beidh
Ali Salem al-Beidh was a Yemeni politician who served as the General Secretary of the Yemeni Socialist Party in South Yemen and as Vice President of Yemen following the unification in 1990. He left the unification government in 1993, sparking the 1994 civil war in Yemen and then went into exile in Oman. He was a leader of the Southern independence movement known as Al Hirak.
Early life and education
Al-Beidh was born on 10 February 1939 in the village of Ma'bar in Ar Raydah Wa Qusayar district of Hadhramaut. He grew up in a rural tribal environment with little access to education, which he received in traditional schools. After completing primary and intermediate education in the city of Ghayl Ba Wazir, he moved to Aden in 1956 for his secondary education. It was in Aden where Beidh began engaging in political and student activism, becoming the head of the Hadhrami Students Union in 1959. His political life further developed in Egypt, which he traveled to in 1963 to study engineering at Cairo University, while becoming a prominent member of the Yemeni Students Association.Leadership in South Yemen
Al-Beidh studied for a Commerce degree and became a School Teacher in Mukalla in 1961. He joined the National Liberation Front in 1963 as the Local Committee founder in Mukalla, and went underground in 1965. In 1966 he was admitted into the Hadramawt Provincial Committee of the NLF. After independence, he joined the YSP. In 1971 he was selected as the General Secretary of the Hadhramawt Provincial Committee and was admitted into the YSP National Central Committee as a Candidate-Member. Selected as Full Member of the Central Committee in 1975, well as Deputy Minister for School Education and Vocational Training. In 1977, he was admitted as Candidate Member for the YSP Politburo and a full Politburo member in 1981. Ali took the top position in the YSP following a 12-day 1986 civil war between forces loyal to former chairman Abdul Fattah Ismail and then-chairman Ali Nasir Muhammad. An Ismail ally, he took control after Muhammad's defeat and defection and Ismail's disappearance. In a coup that took the lives of anywhere from 4,000 to 10,000 people, Ali was one of the few high-ranking officials who survived.Suffering a loss of more than half its aid from the Soviet Union from 1986 to 1989 and interest in possible oil reserves on the border between the countries, Ali's government worked toward unification with North Yemen officials.