Ali Nasir Muhammad Husani () (born 1939) was twice
president of the
People's Democratic Republic of Yemen. He served as Chairman of the Presidential Council from 26 June 1978 - 27 December 1978. In April 1980, South Yemeni president
Abdul Fattah Ismail resigned and went into exile. His successor was Ali Nasir Muhammad who took a less interventionist stance toward both
North Yemen and neighbouring
Oman. On January 13, 1986, a violent struggle began in
Aden between Ali Nasir's supporters and supporters of the returned Ismail. Fighting lasted for more than a month and resulted in thousands of casualties, Ali Nasir's ouster, and Ismail's death. Muhammad's term had lasted from 21 April 1980 to 24 January 1986. Some 60,000 people, including the deposed Ali Nasir, fled to North Yemen. He was succeeded by
Haidar Abu Bakr al-Attas.
Mohammed was a member of the
National Front, ar. الجبهة القومية (NF) as well as the
Yemeni Socialist Party (YSP - الحزب الاشتراكي اليمني ) after the YSP was formed from the UPONF in October 1978. During the
1994 Civil War in Yemen, he pushed his supporters to operate alongside the forces of Sana'a government and against the recently re-established
Democratic Republic of Yemen, seeking revenge for his ouster. The southern secession was repressed in July 1994 after the surrender of
Aden and
Mukalla strongholds.
The former president became an opposition figure in the
2011 Yemeni uprising, being named to a 17-member transitional...
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