Yemen's president Ali Abdullah Saleh steps down
Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh steps down after 33 years in power and months of protests which took the country to the brink of civil war.
Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh formally handed power to his deputy, Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi, who was sworn in as head of state on Saturday.
The transfer is part of a Gulf Co-operation Council-brokered agreement.
Under the deal, Hadi will serve a two-year term and oversee the drafting of a new constitution. Saleh was also granted immunity from prosecution.
Aides to the former president have said that he plans to go into exile, although there have been problems finding any country that will accept him. The Associated Press quoted Yemeni officials on Monday, however, as saying that Ethiopia had agreed.
Saleh is the fourth Arab leader to be removed from power after more than a year of mass protests in the region. He only returned to Yemen on Saturday after receiving medical treatment in the United States for injuries sustained in an assassination attempt last June.
After handing Hadi the flag of Yemen at the ceremony, he said: "I hand over the banner of the revolution, of the republic, of freedom, of security and of stability... to safe hands."
He also called on the country to unite behind the new leader.
Opposition MPs boycotted the ceremony because of Saleh's presence. Security forces controlled by him and his family, as well as armed loyalists, were blamed killing hundreds of people during the 11-month uprising that forced him to step aside in November.
Hadi was sworn in as Yemen's new president on Sunday after an election in which he was the only candidate.
Tuesday's poll was marred by violence in the south of the country in which nine people were killed. A car bomb also exploded in Hadramawt province on Saturday, killing 26 people.
Correspondents say the violence underscores the challenges Yemen - the poorest country in the Arab world - still faces after the departure of Saleh.
Hadi has to tackle widespread poverty and malnutrition, a secessionist movement in the south, rebellions across the country and a fight against al-Qaeda militants.
At his swearing-in ceremony in parliament, he promised to work to bring home the thousands of internal refugees created by fighting between government troops, southern separatists, mutinous military units, and other factions.
He is expected to serve a two-year term to pave the way for new parliamentary and presidential elections in 2014.