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On 11 February 2011, it was imperative for Yemenis to lead a revolution against Saleh’s corrupt regime, and nobody has the right to hold the people accountable for consequences, said human rights activist and Nobel Peace Prize Laureate.
“When a revolution becomes an imperative, the victory becomes an inevitable conclusion, and a revolution can be seen as an inevitable one only when people find themselves obliged to pay the required price,” Karman wrote on social media.
She added, "If there were no tax cost for the revolution, it would have nothing to do with inevitability, but with historical, political development in favour of those targeted by the self-styled revolution.”
Mrs. Karman went saying that all this ruin makes us say, and we are completely right, that ousted president is a moron, the snake’s head and the source of evils in Yemen because he has made us pay all this heavy price.
The leader in Yemen’s revolution concluded by saying, "When the revolution becomes inevitable necessity, the change for the better becomes necessarily inevitable,” calling on February’s youth to “keep their revolutionary certainty as the bright side of history would be by your side.”