Security forces in Yemen have opened  fire on peaceful protesters in the capital Sanaa on Tuesday, wounding at  least 75 people demonstrating for an end to President Ali Abdullah  Saleh's 32-year rule.  Three of the wounded were in a serious condition, according to medical sources.  Policemen and security agents in civilian clothes opened fire as they tried to prevent people from joining thousands of protesters who have camped out for weeks in front of Sanaa University, the epicentre of the demonstrations.  Al Jazeera's Hashem Ahelbarra, reporting from the capital Sanaa, said  the security forces were "clearly given orders to disperse the crowd."  "This is a dramatic turn of events that will likely raise tensions.  The protesters were trying to move to Tahrir Square, and the government  seems to have panicked," he added.  Our correspondent points out that the shooting comes few weeks after president Saleh pledged to protect peaceful protesters.  There was no immediate government comment.  Police brought out water cannon and placed concrete blocks around  Sanaa University, the rallying point for anti-Saleh protest that had  been quiet in recent days, after weeks of fierce clashes across the  country between government loyalists and protesters that killed at least  27 people.  Separately, around 10,000 protesters marched in the city of Dhamar,  60 km (40 miles) south of Sanaa, residents said by telephone. Dhamar is  known for ties to Saleh and is the hometown of Yemen's prime minister,  interior minister and head judge.  "Leave! leave!" the protesters shouted in Dhamar, just two days after  Saleh loyalists there held a similar-sized rally. Protesters also  pelted a municipal official with rocks.  Burgeoning protests fuelled by anger over poverty and corruption, and a series of defections from  Saleh's political and tribal allies, have added pressure on him to step  aside this year even as he pledges to stay on until his term ends in  2013.  Prisoners killed  Meanwhile, three prisoners at a Sanaa prison were reported killed and  four others injured, Sharif Mobley, an inmate, told Al Jazeera via  phone.  Dozens more were injured as a consequence of the unrest, which began  on Monday, when around 2,000 prisoners staged riots, taking a dozen  guards hostage.  The inmates set their blankets and mattresses on fire before  occupying the prison's main courtyard, an official who declined to be  named because he is not authorised to speak to the media said.  The guards fired tear gas and gunshots into the air but failed to subdue the prisoners, the official added.  "At the moment there is no violence, there is no fighting," Mobley  said on Tuesday morning, "but the situation is really looking very bad".  "The offices of the prison official have been burned down and the guards have all left and are now outside," he said.  "Authorities are outside the prison gates and we are inside the  prison. We don't want to make any problems and are afraid for our  lives."  Al Jazeera's Hashem Ahelbarra, said the "situation has not yet been contained".  "We have been told by different sources and inmates that the  situation is really delicate ... inside the jail. It is has [also]  become very tense in the capital," said our correspondent.  Yemen has been rocked by protests inspired by recent uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia that ousted those nations' leaders.  Many protesters are angry at widespread corruption in a country where  40 per cent live on $2 a day or less and where university graduates  without connections struggle to get jobs. Youth unemployment is rampant.  Yemen is also riven with regional strife, with Shia rebels in the  north and separatists in the south demanding fairer political  participation.                                |          
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