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Flag of Yemen - Wikipedia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The national flag of Yemen (Arabic: علم اليمن, romanized'Alam al-Yaman) is the official flag of Yemen. It was adopted on 22 May 1990, the day of the Yemeni unification. It resembles the Arab Liberation Flag that was used by the National Liberation Front. It served as the derivation for the flags of both North and South Yemen prior to their unification, and the distinctive elements of flag were removed in choosing the flag post-unification.[1]

National Liberation Front supporters waving their flags as part of the celebrations, demonstrations and mass marches after the British Withdrawal from Aden

According to the official description, the red stands for unity and the bloodshed of martyrs, the white for a bright future, and the black for the supposed dark past. The flag is graphically identical to the flag of the Libyan Arab Republic from 1969 to 1972.[1]

Construction sheet[edit] construction sheet of the flag Meaning behind the colors[edit] Scheme Textile colour Red the blood of martyrs who struggle to achieve independence and unity[2][3] White Represents a bright future[2][3] Black To stand for the dark days of the past[2][3]
Colors scheme Red White Black Hexadecimal #CE1126 #FFFFFF #000000 RGB 206–17–38 255–255–255 0–0–0 CMYK 0, 90, 76, 0 0, 0, 0, 0 0, 0, 0, 100 Pantone 032 N/A Black RAL 3028 N/A 9005 Source:[4][5]

The Federalization of Yemen or the Federal Republic of Yemen was the outcome of the National Dialogue Conference. The Dialogue members also agreed that Yemen would be transformed into a six-region federal system.[6] The regions would be Azal in the North, Saba in the center, Tihama in the West, Aden and Janad in the South, and Hadhramaut in the East.

Before Yemen was unified into the present-day Republic of Yemen in 1990, it existed as two states, North and South Yemen.

The Kingdom of Yemen was never a British protectorate, it was nominally part of the Ottoman Empire until 1918 and was independent thereafter. Independently, here were two British protectorates (known as the Eastern and Western Aden Protectorates) which contained 24 sultanates, emirates and sheikhdoms in the hinterland of Aden.[7]

The flag was in use until 1962 when the imam was overthrown and the Yemen Arab Republic was established. A civil war between republicans (supported by Egypt) and royalists (supported by Saudi Arabia) continued until 1970, with the royalist side continuing to use the flag of the kingdom.[7]

Yemen Arab Republic[edit]

When the Yemen Arab Republic revolted against the imamate in 1962, a version of the Arab Liberation Flag with one green star in the center of the white band which symbolized unity and independence.[8]

The flag of the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen in the South was a version of the Arab Liberation Flag with a light blue chevron which represented the people under the leadership of the National Liberation Front, with a red star next to the hoist representing the NLF itself and later the Socialist Party.[8][9] The flag was adopted on 30 November 1967 when South Yemen declared independence from the United Kingdom until the Yemeni unification in 1990.[8] It was used again for a few months in 1994 during the existence of the Democratic Republic of Yemen.


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