Yemeni Armed Forces: We advise foreign companies to leave the UAE.
A spokesman for the Yemeni Armed Forces called the UAE insecure as long as its rulers continued their military aggression against Yemen and advised foreign investment companies to leave the UAE.
Yemeni Armed Forces spokesman Yahya Sari advised foreign companies investing in the UAE to leave the country.
“After today’s catastrophes committed by the Saudi-American-Emirati coalition air force against our beloved nation, we advise foreign companies in the small country of the UAE to leave this country,” Yahya said in a statement.
“As long as the UAE rulers continue to aggress against us, it means that foreign companies have invested in the small insecure country,” the statement said.
The bombing of a prison in Saada province this morning (Friday) has become one of the deadliest attacks by the Saudi coalition in Yemen, killing more than 77 people and injuring 112 others, according to the latest figures.
Simultaneously with the attack on Saada, the coastal city of Al-Hudaidah also witnessed airstrikes by Saudi fighters last night and this morning. The attack targeted the city’s telecommunications building, leaving three dead and 17 injured; According to local sources, most of the victims were children who were playing on the football field near the telecommunications building.
The incessant bombardment of Sanaa, al-Hudaidah and Saada began on Tuesday, following a drone and missile strike by the Yemeni army and popular committees on Abu Dhabi, and Saudi fighter jets bomb the Yemeni capital and other parts of the country on a daily basis.
Saudi Arabia, at the head of an Arab coalition backed by the United States, has launched a military aggression against Yemen and imposed a land, air and sea blockade on April 26, 2015, claiming that it was trying to bring the resigned Yemeni president back to power.
The military aggression did not achieve any of the goals of the Saudi coalition and was only accompanied by the killing and wounding of tens of thousands of Yemenis, the displacement of millions, the destruction of the country’s infrastructure and the spread of famine and infectious diseases.