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Yemen has established itself as a tourist destination, attracting travellers with its striking scenery and spectacular Islamic and pre-Islamic architecture. Yemen boasts hugely varied landscapes, from magnificent mountains to lush fruit-growing valleys to semi-arid plains and wide sandy beaches. The towns and cities hide souks and spice markets, mosques and ancient city walls.
The country is home to numerous significant archeological sites, while adventure travellers can enjoy camping and trekking in the unique Socotra archipelago, which counts over 270 endemic species among its enormous range of wildlife and plantlife.
To the Romans, Yemen was Arabia Felix, whose mountains and fertile areas distinguished it from the barren desert of the rest of the Arabian peninsula. After the fall of the Roman Empire, Yemen
came into the seventh century under the influence of Islam. It remained within the orbit of various regional powers until, in the 15th century, it became a flashpoint in the struggle
between the Egyptians and the Ottoman Empire. During the early 17th and early 19th centuries, the struggle for control was between the Europeans and the Ottomans.
Protection of the Suez sea route was imperative for the British, who occupied the port of Aden in 1839. The Yemeni hinterland was mostly under the loose control
of the Ottoman Empire throughout the 19th century, until 1918, when the Imam Yahya took power in what became the Yemen Arab
Republic (YAR). Aden and its surroundings, meanwhile, were firmly established as a British colony. Yahya was assassinated in 1948 and his son Ahmed took over. From 1958 to 1961, the YAR was federated with Egypt and Syria
in the United Arab States. Ahmed died in 1962 and an army coup led to civil war.
By this time, in the south, the British colonial forces faced armed opposition from both the leftist National Liberation Front
(NLF) and the Front for the Liberation of Occupied South Yemen (FLOSY). In 1967, just before the formation of the Yemen Democratic
People’s Republic in the south by the victorious NLF forces, a Republican government took control in the north. There was
intermittent warfare between the two Yemens throughout the late 1960s and early 1970s and political instability in the north
throughout the 1970s.
In 1978, Lieutenant-Colonel Ali Abdullah Saleh became head of state in the north. In the same year, Ali Nasser Muhammad became
head of state in the south. In 1986, civil war between rival elements within the armed forces broke out. A new government
was formed under Haydar Abu Bakr al-Attas. The long-promised merger of the two Yemens took place in 1990 and Ali Abdullah Saleh became leader of the unified country.
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