Ansarullah asked Jordan to remove the restriction on the admission of Yemeni patients.
Mustafa Al-Darwish, the head of the High Medical Committee of the National Salvation Government of Yemen, supported by Ansarullah, told “Al-Masira” channel: “We were all waiting for an increase in flights, when suddenly we were faced with restrictions on the travel of Yemeni patients for treatment in Jordan.”
He added: The decision of the Jordanian authorities to prevent the admission of Yemeni patients and make it conditional on the medical report issued by the country’s hospitals is unfair, unreasonable and will impose an additional material burden on the shoulders of these patients.
Al-Darwish said: Jordan’s recent decision will mean that the destination of Jordan as a place of treatment for Yemeni patients has decreased and this country has become only a place for forced transit of these patients.
This official in the Ministry of Health of the Government of National Salvation of Yemen pointed out: Creating obstacles against incurable patients in Yemen is not far from the scenario that their trip to Egypt and India for treatment will be canceled.
The head of the High Medical Committee of Yemen asked Jordan to reconsider the unjust decision regarding Yemeni patients and help them to reduce the humanitarian crisis caused by the siege and attack on this country.
“Abd al-Wahhab al-Dara,” the Minister of Transportation of the National Salvation Government of Yemen, also announced on Thursday morning: three flights a week to Amman, the capital of Jordan, do not meet the needs of incurable patients, who cannot be treated inside the country after eight years of siege and aggression. .
Khaled Al-Shayef, Director General of Sana’a International Airport, also pointed out that the flights to Jordan include only 10% of the agreements that have been made, and said: Five destinations were agreed upon during the de-escalation period.
The ceasefire in Yemen, which has been repeatedly violated by the aggressor Saudi coalition, was extended once before following UN consultations. The 2-month extension of this ceasefire ended on August 11, which was extended again, and ended on October 10 without reaching a new agreement due to the excesses of the Saudis and not meeting the legitimate demands of the Yemeni people.