Gulf Today

Riyadh will continue to ‘treat Houthis as terrorists’

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RIYADH: Saudi Arabia will continue to treat Yemen’s Houthis as a terrorist organisati­on despite a US decision to lit the designatio­n on the group, according to the kingdom’s permanent representa­tive to the United Nations.

There has been no other official response from Riyadh to the announceme­nt on Friday by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Friday that Washington would, effective Feb.16, lit the terrorist group designatio­n.

“Despite this, we will still deal with the Houthi militia as a terrorist organisati­on and address its threats with military action,” Abdullah Al Muallami, told Saudi-owned Asharq News in remarks retweeted by the kingdom’s UN mission on Saturday.

The Saudi government media office CIC did not immediatel­y respond to a Reuters’ request for comment on the decision.

However, on Sunday several commentato­rs at state-controlled media outlets criticised the US decision, saying it would only embolden the Iran-aligned Houthis, who have recently stepped up atacks against Saudi Arabia.

“A clear contradict­ion exists between the new administra­tion’s claim to support the kingdom’s security and its sot approach with the Houthis,” wrote Hamoud Abu Talib in Okaz newspaper on Sunday.

Fellow columnist Fahim Al Hamid, also writing in Okaz, said the decision was a “git” to the Houthis and Iran that “sends the wrong signals.”

The Houthis, batling a Saudi-led coalition that intervened in Yemen in 2015, last week claimed several drone atacks on southern Saudi Arabia.

Most were intercepte­d but one hit a civilian airport on Wednesday.

The White House condemned the atack, and Blinken held a phone call with his Saudi counterpar­t to discuss joint efforts towards bolstering Saudi defences and diplomacy to end the Yemen conflict.

Biden’s administra­tion has said it would halt US support for the Saudi-backed military campaign but continue to pressure the Houthis, who control northern Yemen ater ousting the Saudi-backed government from power in the capital, Sanaa.

Riyadh accuses Iran of supplying arms and training to the Houthis, a charge denied by the group and Tehran.

Describing liting the designatio­n as a “terrible mistake,” Saudi columnist Mohammed Al Al Sheikh wrote in Al Jazirah newspaper, that Biden should build on his predecesso­r’s “maximum pressure” campaign on Tehran, which saw Washington re-impose sanctions on Iran ater quiting a 2015 internatio­nal nuclear pact. Riyadh backed that policy.

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