Saudi MASAM Removes over 360,573 Mines Planted by Houthis in Yemen

 The Saudi Project MASAM removed 360,000 mines in Yemen. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
The Saudi Project MASAM removed 360,000 mines in Yemen. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Saudi MASAM Removes over 360,573 Mines Planted by Houthis in Yemen

 The Saudi Project MASAM removed 360,000 mines in Yemen. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
The Saudi Project MASAM removed 360,000 mines in Yemen. (Asharq Al-Awsat)

The Saudi Project for Landmines Clearance in Yemen (MASAM) announced Friday that it has successfully removed 360,573 landmines, improvised explosive devices and various unexploded ordnance in eight liberated provinces in Yemen.

It said a number of Arab studies and research centers in Cairo have recently honored this project by MASAM for its humanitarian role in saving the lives of millions of Yemenis.

MASAM’s Assistant Director General Professor Khaled al-Otaibi received the awards on the behalf of the project’s Managing Director, Ousama al-Gosaibi.

During its four-year operation period, the project lost 33 deminers, including five foreign experts and 28 Yemeni nationals, while more than 42 were injured during the demining operations.

Gosaibi said that the Iranian-backed Houthi militias plant and re-plant mines on daily basis, with little consideration for the lives of civilians, including children, women and the elderly who make up the majority of landmine victims in Yemen.

He affirmed that the project seeks to develop its capabilities and methods in the field of demining despite the militias’ insistence to develop their methods to target the largest possible number of civilians.

He further pointed out that the militias have introduced new technology into the manufacture of these explosives and mines, including new methods and mechanisms to remotely detonate these booby-traps.

Highlighting long technical assessment of the makeup of these new types of landmines, Gosaibi stressed that this act amounts to war crimes committed indiscriminately against civilians.

The technical evaluations show that the explosives and booby-traps are manufactured and installed inside Yemen, but the materials used in their manufacture are imported and cannot be locally manufactured.

He also revealed that Houthis have adopted a brutal approach by professionally planting explosives and booby-traps in schools, health centers and water tanks, in large quantities.

Clearing Yemen of mines will take years, Gosaibi lamented, underlining the density of landmines and the lack of minefield maps.

MASAM estimates that the militias planted more than one million landmines and explosive devices in the areas they ran.

In May, Saudi Arabia extended MASAM’s operations for a fifth year at an estimated cost of $33.3 million to carry out its mission in Yemen – clearing residential areas (homes, water sources and places of worship), schools, and roads of Houthi planted landmines.

Landmines have claimed the lives of thousands of Yemenis, and injured tens of thousands of people – often with disabling injuries and amputations.

On April 4, the United Nations Development Program office in Yemen revealed that landmines and unexploded ordnance had killed or injured 1,800 civilians, including 689 women and children, in a number of Yemeni governorates over the last four years.

Reports from international and local organizations confirm that Yemen has witnessed one of the largest mine-laying operations on its territory since the end of World War II.



Saudi FM Reiterates Kingdom’s Rejection of Displacement of Palestinians

Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan bin Abdullah speaks at the press conference on Friday. (SPA)
Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan bin Abdullah speaks at the press conference on Friday. (SPA)
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Saudi FM Reiterates Kingdom’s Rejection of Displacement of Palestinians

Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan bin Abdullah speaks at the press conference on Friday. (SPA)
Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan bin Abdullah speaks at the press conference on Friday. (SPA)

Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan bin Abdullah reiterated on Friday the Kingdom’s rejection of the displacement of Palestinians from their territories.

During a news conference following the "Antalya Ministerial Meeting on the Two-State Solution and Permanent Peace in the Middle East" in Türkiye, he stressed the importance of an immediate return to the ceasefire in Gaza.

The ceasefire must be sustainable, serve as a path to alleviate the suffering of the people of Gaza, and be the beginning of a final solution to the Palestinian cause through the establishment of a Palestinian state, he declared.

"The entry of aid to Gaza cannot be linked to a ceasefire, as this violates the foundations of international law, and preventing aid from reaching the Gaza Strip and using it as a tool of war is also a flagrant violation of all norms and the foundations of international law and is rejected by all," Prince Faisal said.

He called on the international community to exert all pressure to ensure that humanitarian aid reaches civilians in Gaza without interruption and in sufficient quantities.

He expressed the Kingdom's categorical rejection of all forms of displacement of the Palestinian people from their lands, even if it is through voluntary departure, considering that the Palestinians in Gaza are being deprived of most necessities of life.

"If aid is not entering, if the residents of Gaza are deprived of food, drink, and electricity, and if they are threatened every day with military bombardment, then even if one of them is forced to leave, that is not voluntary but a form of coercion. Therefore, it must be clear that any displacement of Palestinians in Gaza under any pretext is categorically rejected," he added.

Prince Faisal stressed that the Arab and Islamic group is committed to a comprehensive peace that guarantees the security of all in the region and guarantees the rights, security, and future of the Palestinian people within the framework of their independent state.