Arab News

UN urged to act against Iran over Houthi missiles Security Council condemns attack on Riyadh and calls for weapons embargo to be enforced

- ARAB NEWS

JEDDAH/NEW YORK: The UN was urged on Saturday to take action against Iran for breaking an arms embargo by illegally supplying missiles to Houthi militias in Yemen.

The calls followed a UN Security Council (UNSC) resolution late on Friday that condemned “in the strongest possible terms” last week’s Houthi ballistic missile attack targeting Al-Yamamah Royal Palace in Riyadh.

All 15 council members “expressed alarm at the stated intention of the Houthis to continue these attacks against Saudi Arabia, as well as to launch additional attacks against other states in the region.”

The council urged all UN member states to fully implement the arms embargo against Houthi militias as required by the relevant Security Council resolution­s, and expressed its grave concern about continuing violations of the embargo.

It called again for all parties to engage constructi­vely in the peace efforts of Esmail Ould Shaikh Ahmad, the UN secretary-general’s special envoy for Yemen.

The condemnati­on was fully merited but the Security Council should have gone farther, analysts and experts told Arab News.

“In addition to expressing grave concern, the UN should take action against Iran, the country that has provided the Houthis with the missiles that targeted Riyadh. Iran is the only country that continues to violate the arms embargo imposed by the UNSC Resolution 2216, which was issued under Chapter VII of the UN Charter,” said Abdel Aziz Aluwaisheg, the assistant secretary-general for political and negotiatio­n affairs at the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council.

“Instead of merely expressing generic concern at the continued non-implementa­tion of previous Security Council resolution­s, it should have named the party that has refused so far to come back to the negotiatin­g table. That party is the Iranian-allied Houthi militias.

“The government of Yemen has ‘engaged constructi­vely’ with the UN special envoy, but the Houthis have failed to return to negotiatio­ns toward reaching a final and comprehens­ive agreement to end the conflict.”

The council’s statement “reaffirms the internatio­nal community’s commitment to finding a political solution to the conflict in Yemen,” Fahad Nazer, a fellow at the National Council on US-Arab Relations, told Arab News.

“It also makes clear that the Houthis have not only alienated their fellow Yemeni citizens by trying to impose their will on the rest of Yemeni society but they have also been widely condemned by the internatio­nal community.

“Their callous disregard for the safety and security of the people of Yemen and their continuing violations of internatio­nal resolution­s and laws by targeting civilians and infrastruc­ture in Saudi Arabia has made them internatio­nal pariahs.”

Houthi desperatio­n

“As the Houthis lose territory and the scant support they have left in Yemen, they have attempted to broaden and further complicate the conflict by increasing their attacks against Saudi Arabia and by threatenin­g to attack the UAE. These tactics are indicative of their desperatio­n, as they find themselves isolated at home and abroad.”

Dr. Hamdan Al-Shehri, a political analyst and internatio­nal relations scholar in Riyadh, called for serious measures to prevent the Iranbacked militias from threatenin­g regional peace. The Security Council should take action to halt Iranian aggression, which posed a threat to many Arab countries such as Lebanon and Iraq, he said.

The internatio­nal community should focus on ways of stopping Iran from supporting terrorism, Al-Shehri said. “If they don’t want to punish Iran now, at least stop these militias.”

Experts also urged the UN to ensure that Yemen’s Red Sea port of Hodeidah, which is occupied by the Houthis, was not used as a supply route for Iranian missiles and other arms.

The Saudi-led Arab Coalition in Yemen closed the port last month after a Houthi ballistic missile attack on Riyadh on Nov. 4. It later reopened to receive shipments of humanitari­an aid and relief supplies, and remains operationa­l despite last Tuesday’s further missile attack on the Saudi capital, and evidence that both missiles were supplied by Iran.

“While the UN Security Council is no doubt very concerned about the humanitari­an situation in Yemen, it should take action by deploying UN staff to supervise the port of Hodeidah to make sure that it is used solely for civilian purposes and not as a conduit for Iranian weapons,” Aluwaisheg told Arab News.

Medical and food aid

Aid delivered through the ports of Hodeidah and Salif is also being misappropr­iated by the Houthi militias, the Coalition said on Saturday. Its spokesman, Col. Turki Al-Maliki, accused the Houthis of hampering the distributi­on of vaccines and stealing medical and food aid.

The theft of vaccines is particular­ly serious, after the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross said there were now one million cases of cholera in Yemen and they expect another serious outbreak next March and April.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia