Thousands fill the streets of the Yemeni capital Sanaa, angry that President Saleh looks set to receive immunity from prosecution.<br/> The deal, brokered by Yemen's Gulf neighbours, was signed by Saleh on Wednesday.<br/> It sees him surrender power after 33 years of autocratic rule and comes after ten months of protests demanding its end.<br/> But Yemenis are angry he will never face prosecution.<br/> (SOUNDBITE) (Arabic) (ANOTHER ANTI-GOVERNMENT PROTESTER SAYING:<br/> "Regarding the guarantee, it is completely rejected. We will not abide by that. International laws do not allow this at all. Rights cannot be dropped like that."<br/> If the deal goes ahead, Saleh will become the fourth Arab ruler brought down by mass demonstrations that have reshaped the political landscape of the Middle East.<br/> Lily Grimes, Reuters
