Ṣāliḥ attended the local Qurʾānic school and joined the army at age 16. Four years later, on September 26, 1962, he led a military coup that replaced the Islamic monarch of North Yemen with a civilian government. Continuing to advance in his military career, he helped to bring Ibrāhīm al-Ḥamdī to power in a 1974 coup, but the assassination of Ḥamdī in 1977 and of his successor in the following year threw the country into turmoil. The result was Ṣāliḥ's elevation to the presidency by the People's Council on July 17, 1978. He survived an attempted military coup later in the year and in 1983 was reelected unanimously by the People's Council to a new term.
From the beginning Ṣāliḥ promoted the unification of North Yemen with South Yemen (Aden), and the merger finally took place on May 22, 1990, with Ṣāliḥ as president. In April 1993, in the first elections held after unification, Ṣāliḥ's party, the General People's Congress (GPC), won the largest representation in the House of Representatives (parliament). A full-scale civil war between forces of the north and the south broke out on May 5, 1994, but when the fighting ended on July 7, Ṣāliḥ remained firmly in power. In elections held in 1997 the GPC consolidated its control of parliament, further strengthening the president's position. In the first direct elections for the presidency, held in September 1999, he won more than 96 percent of the ballots cast, although most opponents boycotted the voting.
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