The head of the Yemeni National Salvation Government negotiating team said that the United States is pursuing its plans in Yemen to cover up humanitarian issues and is not serious about lifting the siege and aggression against Yemen.
The head of the Yemeni National Salvation Government’s negotiating team stressed the need to lift the siege of Yemen without linking it to political issues.
“The United States is not serious about stopping the aggression against Yemen and lifting the siege of Yemen, but seeks to carry out its plans in Yemen, and the suffering of the Yemeni people does not matter to it,” Mohammed Abdul Salam told Al-Masira.
“We emphasize that importing food and medicine into Yemen is the natural right of this country and there is no room for debate, and of course we do not want to receive help from anyone, what we want is to lift the siege,” he said.
The head of the negotiating team of the Yemeni National Salvation Government stated about the UN action to include the Ansarullah movement in the blacklist of countries and groups that violate children’s rights: “The UN is acting in favor of the great powers and this has been biased.”
“The aggressor countries are committing the most heinous crimes against children, but they were not included in the list,” Abdul Salam said. The United States has been covering humanitarian issues deliberately.
He added: “We are asking former UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon about the reason for removing the name of Saudi Arabia.
We asked the children and he replied that they put us under financial pressure.
The chairman of the Sanaa negotiating team stressed: “The UN decisions have been rejected within the framework of political criteria and accusations.”
The Minister of Information of the Yemeni National Salvation Government also said: “Guterres’ decision to include Ansarullah in the list of violators of children’s rights is a clear sign of hypocrisy and hypocrisy.”
He added: “We have not seen anything from the United Nations other than giving a white check, a signature, and a medal to the aggressors.”
The United Nations said in a report on Friday that Secretary-General Guterres had decided to blacklist the Houthi movement, but no such decision had been made in Saudi Arabia.
The military invasion of Yemen entered its seventh year in April 1400. An unequal war that, according to UN officials, is the worst humanitarian catastrophe in the world today. A tragedy with political, social, military, regional, and global dimensions and consequences, so far there is no clear horizon to stop it.