Saudi Arabia Urges Designation of Houthis as Terrorist

Saudi Ambassador to the United Nations, Dr. Abdulaziz al-Wasil, addresses the Security Council on Thursday. (UN)
Saudi Ambassador to the United Nations, Dr. Abdulaziz al-Wasil, addresses the Security Council on Thursday. (UN)
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Saudi Arabia Urges Designation of Houthis as Terrorist

Saudi Ambassador to the United Nations, Dr. Abdulaziz al-Wasil, addresses the Security Council on Thursday. (UN)
Saudi Ambassador to the United Nations, Dr. Abdulaziz al-Wasil, addresses the Security Council on Thursday. (UN)

Saudi Arabia called on Thursday for the designation of the Iran-backed Houthi militias in Yemen as terrorist.

The Kingdom’s Ambassador to the United Nations, Dr. Abdulaziz al-Wasil said the time has come for the designation and for the boycott of the militias and drying up of their sources of funding.

He stressed that Saudi Arabia continues to support international efforts to restore peace in Yemen, adding that it has the right to defend itself “should the Houthis again return to attacking it.”

“It will not spare an effort to deter such hostile acts against it,” he added during a briefing at the UN Security Council.

He remarked that the Houthis’ rejection of the proposal to extend the nationwide truce on October 2 “came as no surprise to those who were aware of the group that had put their extreme ideological interests at the forefront, taken the Yemeni people hostage, and exposed generations to the risks of armed conflict and war.”

Recalling that the Council last week, for the first time, attributed to the militias the clear responsibility for hindering an agreement to extend the truce, he called on them to cease operations and return to dialogue.

“Their rejection of the truce is one chapter to the many somber chapters that have taken place since 2014, when they attempted a coup against the legitimate government,” al-Wasil said, questioning why they rejected a ceasefire proposal and a resumption of flights.

He outlined other disruptive activities by the Houthis, including hampering the Safer oil tanker operations, which risks an unprecedented disaster in the Red Sea, the laying of mines, illegal weapons trafficking, and the takeover of humanitarian deliveries, as well as the targeting of the infrastructure of neighboring countries through drones.

“They are not peaceful and they do not care about the suffering of the Yemeni people,” al-Wasil stressed.

He welcomed United Nations Special Envoy Hans Grundberg’s efforts towards reaching a comprehensive political solution, but said the Houthis have already violated the truce and refused to put the oil revenue into a special account for civil servants’ salaries.

Furthermore, they had organized military parades in the Hodeidah province in flagrant violation of the Stockholm Agreement, besieged Taiz, and insisted on defying calls for peace and stability.

The international community and the Council should designate the Houthis as a terrorist group to dry up their funding sources. Saudi Arabia reiterates its right to defend itself from attacks on its Kingdom, the envoy said in closing.



Saudi Arabia’s Contribution to Humanitarian Relief Reaches $130 Billion

Saudi Arabia is among the top three leading global donors of development and humanitarian aid. (SPA)
Saudi Arabia is among the top three leading global donors of development and humanitarian aid. (SPA)
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Saudi Arabia’s Contribution to Humanitarian Relief Reaches $130 Billion

Saudi Arabia is among the top three leading global donors of development and humanitarian aid. (SPA)
Saudi Arabia is among the top three leading global donors of development and humanitarian aid. (SPA)

Saudi Arabia has offered a record amount of aid relief to countries in need, reaching 130 billion dollars, revealed new official figures.

This makes the Kingdom among the top three leading global donors of development and humanitarian aid.

From Punjab to Jerusalem

The Kingdom can trace back its record in relief aid to the mid-20th century. In 1950 and under the directives of the founder King Abdulaziz, it sprang to offer humanitarian aid to the victims of floods in Punjab that claimed around 2,900 lives.

The following year, Saudi Arabia set up a major school in Jerusalem where 500 students received comprehensive care and education. King Abdulaziz dedicated 100,000 dollars to the school every year.

Egypt and Yemen

A total of 169 countries have benefitted from the Saudi Arabia’s aid. Six Islamic countries, including five Arab ones, have received the most aid. Egypt tops the list with over 32 billion dollars in aid, followed by Yemen with over 26 billion, Pakistan with around 13 billion, Syria with over 7 billion, Iraq with 7 billion and Palestine with over 5 billion dollars.

Saudi Arabia has executed 7,019 humanitarian, charitable and development projects in these 169 countries. Eighty-eight percent of the projects were dedicated to development.

The number of education projects reached 1,861, food security and agriculture 975, health 750, support and coordination of humanitarian operations 324 and support of budgets 308.

Aid dedicated to the displaced reached 22 billion dollars. Yemeni refugees received over 11 billion dollars alone and Syrians over 6 billion.

KSrelief

On May 13, 2015, Saudi aid embarked on a new chapter with Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman bin Abdulaziz’s inauguration of the King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSrelief).

King Salman said at the time that the center will be dedicated to humanitarian aid, away from any other motives, and that it will cooperate with relief organizations to achieve its goals.

Since then, KSrelief has carried out around 2,674 humanitarian and relief projects, worth over 6 billion dollars, in 99 countries. It has focused its energies on vital sectors, such as food, education, health, nutrition, water, shelter and others. It has been carrying out its work without discriminating against nationality or country.