KSrelief Continues to Deliver Aid to Wounded, Needy Yemenis

KSrelief Continues to Deliver Aid to Wounded, Needy Yemenis
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KSrelief Continues to Deliver Aid to Wounded, Needy Yemenis

KSrelief Continues to Deliver Aid to Wounded, Needy Yemenis

The King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSrelief), continued to treat the wounded and injured Yemenis and provide them with various medical services where more than 24,000 wounded and injured Yemenis benefited from these services since the establishment of the KSrelief in May 2015.

The center also distributed, in cooperation with Benevolence Coalition for Humanitarian Relief, shelter materials to the displaced in Marib.

The aid included 27 tents, 126 blankets, 54 rugs and 27 shelters bags, benefiting 156 people.

Meanwhile, in cooperation with the Al-Khair Coalition for Humanitarian Relief, the Saudi center distributed 44 tons and 400 kilograms of food baskets, benefiting 1,800 displaced people in Saada.

The Prosthetics and Rehabilitation Center, in Taiz, also continued to provide various medical services to the Yemeni people who lost limbs, with support from KSrelief.

During August 2020, KSrelief provided 758 services to 387 beneficiaries.

This comes within the framework of the various projects being provided by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, represented by the KSrelief, to support Yemenis at all levels.



EU Concerned at Arbitrary Detention by Houthis of UN Staff

A number of European Union ambassadors during their meeting with the Chairman of the Yemeni Leadership Council, Rashad Al-Alimi, on a previous visit to Aden (Saba)
A number of European Union ambassadors during their meeting with the Chairman of the Yemeni Leadership Council, Rashad Al-Alimi, on a previous visit to Aden (Saba)
TT

EU Concerned at Arbitrary Detention by Houthis of UN Staff

A number of European Union ambassadors during their meeting with the Chairman of the Yemeni Leadership Council, Rashad Al-Alimi, on a previous visit to Aden (Saba)
A number of European Union ambassadors during their meeting with the Chairman of the Yemeni Leadership Council, Rashad Al-Alimi, on a previous visit to Aden (Saba)

The European Union Heads of Mission to Yemen have expressed deep concern over the Houthis’ detention and disappearance for over three months of dozens of staff working for the UN, international and local organizations, calling for their unconditional release.

Thursday’s EU concern came as Yemeni Information Minister Moammar Al-Eryani condemned the Houthis’ use of torture to extract confessions from staff working for the UN and international organizations.

He said such practices are due to the international community's leniency towards the violations committed by the Iranian-backed group.

In a statement issued on social media platform X, the EU Heads of Mission to Yemen said they are deeply concerned at the arbitrary detention by the Houthis of staff working for the United Nations, international and local NGOs and diplomatic missions in Yemen.

They noted that the detainees have been held “incommunicado and now over 90 days,” which is “severely hampering the capacity of the international community” to deliver essential assistance to millions of Yemenis in urgent need of assistance.

The EU diplomats also voiced their full support for “the repeated international calls, led by UN Secretary-General (Antonio) Guterres, for their immediate and unconditional release.”

The Houthi militias have, since early June, arrested and forcibly disappeared dozens of people, including at least 13 UN staff and many employees of nongovernmental organizations operating in their controlled territories.

The militia has expanded its campaign to include more than 70 employees of international and local organizations in areas under its control in northern and western Yemen, and has accused them of spying for foreign parties.

So far, the international community and UN agencies have failed to convince the Houthi group to release the detainees, while the Yemeni government continues to call for the transferring of the headquarters of UN agencies and international organizations from Houthi-controlled Sanaa to Aden, the country's temporary capital.

Fabricated confessions

The Yemeni Information Minister on Thursday described the Houthis’ publishing and broadcasting of fabricated videos showing detainees “confessing” to espionage, as a “heinous crime.”

He said Houthis obtained the confessions after promising the detainees to release them, without any regard for their age, status, role in community service, or the feelings of their parents.

Al-Eryani said the innocent victims who have been abducted, forcibly hidden, psychologically and physically tortured by Houthis for years, and whose reputation has been tarnished by the publication of their photos and coerced confessions, were performing their routine tasks and jobs normally in their institutions, organizations and embassies.

He said the Houthi militia is bringing false espionage charges against detained people, with no material or moral basis.