Saudi Ambassador to Yemen: Houthi Assessment of Int’l, Regional Position is Wrong

Saudi Ambassador to Yemen Mohammed Al-Jaber speaks during a news conference in Riyadh. (Reuters)
Saudi Ambassador to Yemen Mohammed Al-Jaber speaks during a news conference in Riyadh. (Reuters)
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Saudi Ambassador to Yemen: Houthi Assessment of Int’l, Regional Position is Wrong

Saudi Ambassador to Yemen Mohammed Al-Jaber speaks during a news conference in Riyadh. (Reuters)
Saudi Ambassador to Yemen Mohammed Al-Jaber speaks during a news conference in Riyadh. (Reuters)

Saudi Arabia has warned Houthi militia leaders of the consequences of their actions, urging them to prioritize the interests of Yemenis and choose the path towards peace without dictates or conditions.

Saudi Ambassador Mohammed Al-Jaber, who also supervises the Saudi Program for the Development and Reconstruction of Yemen, said on Twitter that the “Houthis’ reading of the international and regional position is wrong.”

His tweets came a day after the UN Security Council condemned the terrorist attack by the militias on Al-Dubba oil port in eastern Yemen’s Hadramout province.

In a statement, the UN Security Council strongly condemned the Houthi terrorist drone attacks on Oct. 21 that struck the oil terminal, where a tanker was docked, describing it as a serious threat to the peace process and stability of Yemen.

The ambassador noted that the international consensus that the Houthi attack on the port was a “terrorist act” was “a step that confirms… that classifying the Houthi as a terrorist group has become a choice decided by the future actions of the Houthi militias, which he said were not different from those of ISIS and Al-Qaeda.

Al Jaber added that the Iranian-backed Houthis were taking the Yemeni people as hostages to their actions, based on a misreading of the international and regional situation.

He stressed that the Houthis “show willingness to carry out terrorist acts, ignoring the interest of the Yemeni people and the proposals of the UN envoy for a ceasefire.”

For its part, the Yemeni Foreign Ministry welcomed the UN condemnation, pointing to “the urgent need to deter the Iranian-back terrorist Houthi militias and their actions that threaten regional and international peace and security.”

The Yemeni statement underlined “the necessity to punish the perpetrators of the attacks, and support the Yemeni government’s decision to include the Houthi militias on the list of terrorist organizations.”



Syrian Air Says It Is Resuming Its Direct Flights to UAE on Sunday

 Travellers are welcomed at Damascus's airport. (AFP file)
Travellers are welcomed at Damascus's airport. (AFP file)
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Syrian Air Says It Is Resuming Its Direct Flights to UAE on Sunday

 Travellers are welcomed at Damascus's airport. (AFP file)
Travellers are welcomed at Damascus's airport. (AFP file)

Syria's flag carrier Syrian Air will resume direct flights to Dubai and Sharjah in the United Arab Emirates starting on Sunday, the airline said in a Facebook post.

All flights between Syria and the UAE had been suspended in January after opposition factions toppled former leader Bashar al-Assad in December 2024.

The announcement comes days after the UAE's civil aviation authority announced the resumption of air flights between the Gulf country and Syria. No UAE-based airlines have announced plans to fly to Syria so far.

The resumption of flights between the two countries followed Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa’s first visit to the UAE as leader, where he met UAE's President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan.