The National - News

Gargash says ‘victory is close’ in fight for Yemen

▶ Minister praises the sacrifices and efforts made by the Arab coalition

- AL MAHMOUD Aden

The UAE Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Dr Anwar Gargash, said that victory over the Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen was close, as the Yemeni forces and the Arab coalition were closing in on the rebel-held port city of Al Hodeidah.

He praised the efforts and sacrifices of the Saudi-led alliance, which intervened in the Yemen war in 2015 at the request of the internatio­nally recognised government of Yemeni President Abdrabu Mansur Hadi.

“We are following the progress towards Al Hodeidah, and we have the right to be proud of the UAE Army, its officers, its soldiers, its profession­alism, its courage and its honour that have made them a key partner in the Arab coalition that is led by Riyadh to crush the Houthi rebellion,” Dr Gargash tweeted on Thursday.

“Our courageous Armed Forces are part of the vision and hard work that was led by Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed [Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces] through continuous effort and planning. The courage and sacrifices of our sons within the Arab coalition remain the difficult factors that the Houthis did not expect as they tried to take over [Yemen] through their disastrous coup.”

Dr Gargash criticised those attempting to undermine the efforts of the Arab coalition and those who seek to terrorise Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

“Our position in the battle today is the result of the joint sacrifices, and achievemen­ts will not be stolen by those who envy and are ungrateful,” he wrote.

“Yes, the Yemen test was and remains difficult, but there is no choice but to face it.

“Days will prove the correct decision and will of the Saudi leadership, supported by the UAE leadership, will move mountains. “Watch out, victory is close.” Al Hodeidah is Yemen’s largest entry point for aid on which millions depend, as the country teeters on the brink of famine. For the coalition, it is also considered the entry point for rebel weaponry, including ballistic missiles, which it accuses regional rival Iran of supplying.

The Houthis have repeatedly fired missiles at Saudi Arabia, which the US and UN experts say are of Iranian origin, a claim Tehran denies.

On Wednesday, Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman met with Mr Hadi in Jeddah.

The two men discussed the latest developmen­ts as well as ways to boost humanitari­an aid to the Yemeni people, as the country’s forces made advances towards Al Hodeidah.

“The forces have advanced another three kilometres and are now less than six kilometres away from Al Hodeidah airport,” Sky News Arabia quoted sources as saying. “The advances were towards the Taif area and agricultur­al areas, in which members of the Iranian Houthi militia are holed up.”

The Houthis moved more than 50 Iranian consultant­s from the city, reported Asharq

Al Awsat newspaper. They were “taken to Houthi-controlled area in Sanaa and Haja”, said Walid Al Qadimi, secretary of Al Hodeidah district.

He said that some left the city in ambulances, while others were moved to the mountainou­s region near Al Hodeidah.

Maj Gen Abdulatif Ali, of the Yemeni army, told The National, that the Houthis are using the expertise of the Iranians – which back the powerful Lebanese group Hezbollah – to set new military plans as they suffer setbacks in Al Hodeidah and Taez.

Col Abdulbasat Al Baher, a spokesman for the Yemeni army on the Taez front, said that some of the Iranian experts were also specialist missile manufactur­ers.

“They are also experts in military telecommun­ications and in planting land and sea mines,” he said. “Most of them entered Yemen when the Houthis took over the capital Sanaa in September 2014.”

The correct decision and will of the Saudi and UAE leadership will move mountains DR ANWAR GARGASH Minister of State for Foreign Affairs

 ?? AFP ?? Yemeni women and children at a food distributi­on point in Hodeidah province on Thursday. Yemen’s largest entry point for aid is now in the crosshairs of the Saudi-led coalition which is intent on cutting off the Houthi rebels from Iranian arms shipments
AFP Yemeni women and children at a food distributi­on point in Hodeidah province on Thursday. Yemen’s largest entry point for aid is now in the crosshairs of the Saudi-led coalition which is intent on cutting off the Houthi rebels from Iranian arms shipments

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