Yemen’s president vows to defeat ‘new imamates’ as country commemorates 1962 revolution

Special Yemen’s president vows to defeat ‘new imamates’ as country commemorates 1962 revolution
President of Yemen Rashad Al-Alimi prior to addressing the 79th United Nations General Assembly at United Nations headquarters in New York, US, Sept. 26, 2024. (Reuters)
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Yemen’s president vows to defeat ‘new imamates’ as country commemorates 1962 revolution

Yemen’s president vows to defeat ‘new imamates’ as country commemorates 1962 revolution
  • Rashad Al-Alimi calls for global designation of Houthis as terrorist organization to deter militia’s attacks on international shipping lanes
  • ‘Outcome of this decisive battle … will determine our freedom and dignity, as well as the future of all Yemeni men and women,’ he adds

AL-MUKALLA: The chairman of Yemen’s Presidential Leadership Council, Rashad Al-Alimi, pledged to defeat the Houthi militia and end their rule, as the country marked the 62nd anniversary of its Sept. 26 Revolution.

In a televised speech on the eve of the commemoration of the 1962 uprising, he accused the Houthis of attempting to restore the Zaidi Imamate that ruled Yemen before the revolution, and promised to defeat them and foil Iran’s plans for the country.

“At the forefront of our national tasks and priorities is the completion of the country’s liberation from terrorism, slavery, tyranny, ignorance and injustice brought about by the new imamates,” Al-Alimi said.

“We must defeat the Iranian project, and the outcome of this decisive battle, in which we have no choice but to win, will determine our freedom and dignity, as well as the future of all Yemeni men and women.”

The Yemeni leader thanked Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Oman for the support they have provided to the Yemeni people, the transitional council and state bodies, and for facilitating peace talks in the hope of ending the war in the country.

The revolution, which began on Sept. 26, 1962, resulted in the overthrow of the Zaidi Imamate rulers who had controlled northern Yemen for centuries, paving the way for the establishment of the Yemen Arab Republic. Many Yemenis believe the Houthis share similar radical ideologies as the Zaidi Imamate and wish to revive its era, during which rule over the country was limited to Hashemites.

The Houthis have attempted to suppress celebrations of the anniversary of the revolution in areas under their control. They have abducted at least 250 people over the past few days for commemorating the event online or encouraging others to do so. They also deployed forces and armored vehicles in Sanaa, Hodeidah, Taiz, Ibb, Dhamar and other areas to to crack down on any revolutionary rallies.

The Houthis say those who celebrate the revolution are being used by the US and other opponents to put pressure on the militia to halt its attacks on international shipping.

The leader of the group, Abdul Malik Al-Houthi, on Thursday vowed that attacks on vessels in waters off the coast of Yemen will continue until Israel ends its war in the Gaza Strip. He also said his forces would defend Hezbollah against Israeli attacks in Lebanon.

“We will continue to support Gaza and Palestine in general, as well as Lebanon and Hezbollah, without hesitation,” he said during a televised speech.

The Houthis say their attacks on ships using missiles, unmanned aerial vehicles and drone boats, which began in November, target Israeli, American and British ships in an attempt to put pressure on authorities in Israel to halt their military operations in Gaza.

However, critics say the militia is using outrage in Yemen over the deaths of thousands of civilians in Gaza to gain public support, recruit new fighters and divert attention from its failures to address crumbling services and pay public-sector salaries.

Speaking in the US on Wednesday during an event organized by the New York-based Council on Foreign Relations, Al-Alimi called for the Houthis to be globally designated as a terrorist organization in an attempt to deter them from undermining the security of international shipping lanes. He warned that the group would continue to attack ships even if the war in Gaza ended.

“After using the Red Sea as a weapon, Iran and its affiliate militias will continue to blackmail international trade, waterways and the environment in the future,” he said.


‘Stop the genocide. Stop sending weapons to Israel’: Palestinian president

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addresses the 79th United Nations General Assembly at UN headquarters in New York, US.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addresses the 79th United Nations General Assembly at UN headquarters in New York, US.
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‘Stop the genocide. Stop sending weapons to Israel’: Palestinian president

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas addresses the 79th United Nations General Assembly at UN headquarters in New York, US.
  • ‘Israel must stop the war in Lebanon and Palestine,’ Mahmoud Abbas tells UN General Assembly
  • ‘The entire world is responsible for what’s happening to our people in Gaza and the West Bank’

LONDON: Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas on Thursday urged the international community to stop sending weapons to Israel in order to end the war in Gaza and the occupation of the West Bank.

“Stop this crime. Stop it now. Stop killing children and women. Stop the genocide. Stop sending weapons to Israel,” he told the UN General Assembly.

“This madness can’t continue. The entire world is responsible for what’s happening to our people in Gaza and the West Bank.”

Abbas’s comments come after the Health Ministry in Gaza on Thursday said at least 41,534 people have been killed in the war, now in its 12th month.

He said the Israeli government took advantage of the Hamas attack last October to launch an all-out genocide against Gaza. 

“It committed and continues to commit war crimes, as acknowledged by the international community,” Abbas added. 

He said Israel is now launching “a new aggression on the Lebanese people,” who are being “subjected to a war of genocide.”

He added: “Israel must stop the war in Lebanon and in Palestine. We condemn this aggression, and we demand that it stops immediately.

“Israel has reoccupied the Gaza Strip in its entirety … Seventy-five percent of everything in Gaza has been fully destroyed.” 

More than 600 people have been killed since Monday in Israeli strikes on Lebanon, which follow nearly a year of cross-border fire with Hezbollah in parallel with the Gaza war.

Abbas called on the international community to impose sanctions on Israel, and said the country does not deserve to be a UN member. 

“The international community must immediately impose sanctions on Israel. The massacres, the crimes, the genocide that Israel has been perpetrating against our people since its inception in 1948 to this very day won’t go unpunished,” he said.

“Israel, which refuses to implement UN resolutions, doesn’t deserve to be a member in this international organization.”

Abbas called for a comprehensive and permanent ceasefire in Gaza, an end to attacks by Israeli settlers in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, the delivery of humanitarian aid throughout Gaza, and a full Israeli withdrawal from the territory. 

“We refuse the establishment of buffer zones or taking any part from Gaza,” he said. “We won’t allow a single centimeter of Gaza to be taken.

“The State of Palestine must shoulder its responsibilities in the Gaza Strip and impose its full mandate on it and jurisdiction on it, including the border checkpoints, especially the Rafah international border.”

He said the Palestinian Authority should have control over all Palestinian territories, and it would hold elections once the war is over. Hamas has governed Gaza since 2007.

Abbas concluded by saying: “Palestine will be free. It will be free, despite anyone who objects to that. Our people will live on the land of their fathers and grandfathers, as they’ve done for more than 6,000 years. They’ll continue their legitimate struggle for independence. The occupation will end.”


Sudan army chief accuses RSF of ‘ethnic cleansing’ and ‘genocide’

Sudan army chief accuses RSF of ‘ethnic cleansing’ and ‘genocide’
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Sudan army chief accuses RSF of ‘ethnic cleansing’ and ‘genocide’

Sudan army chief accuses RSF of ‘ethnic cleansing’ and ‘genocide’
  • Rapid Support Forces, Sudanese Armed Forces have been in conflict since April 2023
  • More than 6.1m have been displaced and at least 15,000 killed, according to UN figures

NEW YORK CITY: Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan, Sudan’s army chief and chairman of the Transitional Sovereignty Council, on Thursday described the rebel Rapid Support Forces as a “terrorist group” for committing crimes against the country’s people, including “ethnic cleansing, forced displacement and genocide.

Since the ongoing conflict broke out between the RSF and the Sudanese Armed Forces in April 2023, the paramilitary group has taken over the capital Khartoum and most of western Sudan.

The hostilities have killed at least 15,000 people and displaced more than 6.1 million, according to UN figures.

Addressing the UN General Assembly, Al-Burhan stressed his government’s commitment to protecting civilians and aid workers, as well as facilitating humanitarian assistance.

“We fully uphold international humanitarian law and measures geared towards the protection of civilians,” he said. “The protection of civilians is our responsibility.”

He said women and children “are being hit the hardest by violations committed in areas controlled by the militias. Some women and children have even been sold in marketplaces.”

Al-Burhan added that the council has been seeking a peaceful solution to the conflict. “So as to alleviate the suffering of our fellow Sudanese and to facilitate the delivery of humanitarian assistance, we’ve opened our borders and airports,” he said. We’ve lifted all impediments to this aid being delivered.”

The Jeddah Declaration of Commitment to Protect the Civilians of Sudan — signed by the US, Saudi Arabia, and representatives of Sudan’s two warring parties in May 2023 — aimed to achieve a ceasefire and facilitate humanitarian aid distribution.


Algeria slaps visa requirements on Moroccans, citing ‘Zionist espionage’

Algeria slaps visa requirements on Moroccans, citing ‘Zionist espionage’
Updated 33 min 4 sec ago
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Algeria slaps visa requirements on Moroccans, citing ‘Zionist espionage’

Algeria slaps visa requirements on Moroccans, citing ‘Zionist espionage’
  • A statement carried by Algeria’s official APS news agency charged that Morocco had “engaged in various actions that threaten Algeria’s stability“
  • Algiers broke diplomatic ties with Rabat in August 2021, citing “hostile acts” by its neighbor

ALGIERS: Algeria said Thursday it was imposing visa requirements on Moroccans, accusing its passport holders of criminal activity, including “Zionist espionage,” in a new downturn in fraught relations with its neighbor.
A statement carried by Algeria’s official APS news agency charged that Morocco had “engaged in various actions that threaten Algeria’s stability.”
It accused Morocco of having “deployed Zionist espionage agents holding Moroccan passports to freely enter the national territory.”
It also said Morocco had been conducting “multiple networks of organized crime, drug and human trafficking, not to mention smuggling and illegal immigration” within its borders.
Earlier this month, authorities in the Algerian city of Tlemcen said they had arrested seven people, including four Moroccans, accused of belonging to a spy ring.
Algiers broke diplomatic ties with Rabat in August 2021, citing “hostile acts” by its neighbor, months after the kingdom normalized relations with Israel.
In 2020, then US president Donald Trump recognized Morocco’s annexation of the disputed Western Sahara in return for Rabat normalizing relations with Israel.
The border between Algeria and Morocco has been closed for 30 years.
But travelers from Morocco did not need a visa to enter Algerian territory — despite the lack of direct flights — and neither do Algerians to enter Morocco.
There was no immediate response from Rabat to Thursday’s move by Algiers.
Algeria said it was “committed to preserving ties” with the “brotherly” Moroccan people, and blamed the Rabat authorities for recent diplomatic rifts.
“The Moroccan regime alone bears responsibility for the current deterioration of bilateral relations due to its hostile and aggressive actions against Algeria,” it said.
The two countries remain at odds over the Western Sahara and alleged Moroccan support for the Berber separatist movement MAK in Algeria.
The Polisario Front, which is backed by Algiers, has campaigned for the independence of Western Sahara since its colonial ruler Spain pulled out in 1975 but the territory is largely controlled by Morocco.
The United Nations, which has had a peacekeeping mission in Western Sahara since 1991, regards it as a “non-self-governing territory.”
After French President Emmanuel Macron said in July that “the only solution” was a Moroccan plan to grant the territory autonomy within the kingdom without the option of independence, Algeria recalled its ambassador.
Algiers also accuses Rabat of backing the MAK movement, which seeks independence for the Berber Kabylie region east of the capital.
Morocco described the 2021 decision to break off diplomatic relations as “completely unjustified.”


World must do more against ‘Houthi oppression’: Yemeni leader

World must do more against ‘Houthi oppression’: Yemeni leader
Updated 26 September 2024
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World must do more against ‘Houthi oppression’: Yemeni leader

World must do more against ‘Houthi oppression’: Yemeni leader
  • Rashad Al-Alimi: ‘Leniency with the enemies of peace leads to the most heinous wars’
  • He thanks Arab countries, particularly Saudi Arabia and Oman, for their mediation efforts

LONDON: The chairman of Yemen’s Presidential Leadership Council on Thursday urged the international community to do more to counter Houthi activities hampering international shipping through the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden.

Addressing the UN General Assembly in New York on the 62nd anniversary of Yemen’s independence, Rashad Al-Alimi hailed “the courage of those young men and women and opinion leaders who challenge every year … the Houthi oppression machine supported by the Iranian regime.”

He urged world leaders to help Yemen with a “collective approach” in order to “reinforce its institutional capabilities to protect its territorial waters, and to secure all of its national territory.”

Yemen has endured a brutal civil war for over a decade, with the Houthis controlling great swathes of the country including the capital Sanaa.

The militia says its attacks on shipping passing through the region are in response to Israel’s invasion of Gaza.

Al-Alimi said his government is “committed to a comprehensive peace,” but this would only be possible if “international resolutions prohibiting the flow of Iranian weapons and drying up the funding sources (of) these militias” are enforced.

“History teaches us that leniency with the enemies of peace leads to the most heinous wars, to the most complex and costly ones,” he warned.

The Houthis have caused severe damage to Yemen’s economy due to its attacks on oil infrastructure, “depriving the Yemeni people of the needed revenues to pay salaries and basic services, which exacerbated the humanitarian crisis and led to an unprecedented devaluation of our national currency,” he added.

Al-Alimi thanked other Arab countries, particularly Saudi Arabia and Oman, for their efforts in trying to mediate between the Yemeni government, based in the temporary capital Aden, and the Houthis, but said the militia has continued its operations.

He expressed concern that the Houthis would take “more oppressive measures against public freedoms” in the coming months, citing crackdowns on Yemen’s judiciary and the forced disappearances of “thousands of innocent men, women, children, (and the) elderly.”

He also noted the arrest by the Houthis of at least 13 UN aid workers since May, as well as dozens of other NGO and charity workers in Yemen, criticizing the UN for not moving its operations out of Houthi-controlled territory.

“There’s a widespread belief that the UN is responsible for giving these militias the opportunity to kidnap this unprecedented number of relief workers and NGO staff, as well as activists and civil society leaders, by not heeding the call of the Yemeni government to transfer their headquarters from Sanaa to the temporary capital Aden,” Al-Alimi said.

“The UN unintentionally enabled these terrorists to take their personnel as hostages, and to use them as a bargaining chip to blackmail the international community and to achieve negotiation concessions that can’t be accepted under any circumstances,” he added.

“This ongoing pattern of reckless escalation and response to the de-escalation initiatives requires the international community to take firm policies and push these militias towards the choice of peace.”

Al-Alimi stressed that the Houthis are waging an “economic war” by attacking oil tankers, facilities and other shipping vessels, which not only harms the Yemeni people but the wider region.

“The international community should seriously consider the devastating effects of these terrorist acts and to provide the vital infrastructure to defend maritime transportation vessels in Yemeni ports, to support the right of the Yemenis and of the Yemeni government to benefit from their resources and improve their living conditions,” he said.

“Protecting the arteries of the economy is necessary not only to recover and rebuild our future, but it’s important also for the stability of the region and for the security of energy in the long term.

“Therefore, we reiterate our hope for the international community to provide immediate, comprehensive support to address the devastating humanitarian conditions, to lay the foundations for a long-term economic recovery.

“This should include not only immediate humanitarian assistance to alleviate suffering, but should also include accountability mechanisms, especially in the regions under Houthi control. 

“It also requires greater investments in infrastructure, healthcare, education and sustainable development. It requires building the national capacities to curb the impact of climate change, which has left hundreds of victims and displaced thousands within the last two months.

“Yemen’s recovery is not only a national matter, it’s a regional and international need. The stability of Yemen is decisive to safeguard peace and stability in the region and trade routes in the Arabian and Red seas, as well as surrounding waterways, including the Suez Canal.”

Al-Alimi said Israel’s war in Gaza needs to be brought to an end if the region is to stabilize and prosper.

“The brutal Israeli war on the Palestinian people should cease immediately,” he said. “This is the first step to achieve peace and to eliminate Iran’s proxies, which are escalating the situation in the region. 

“Iran has been manipulating the just Palestinian cause, and this didn’t come from a vacuum, (but) from a history of blackmailing and of propaganda, only leading to undermining the peace process and reversing the gains of the Palestinian people and their right to establish a fully sovereign state,” he added.

“Ending the plight of the Palestinian people should be based on implementing international resolutions, especially the Arab Peace Initiative.

“And as is the case for both Yemen and Palestine, the only way to deter the wanton Israeli aggression on Lebanon will be through a firm stance from the international community and through the unity of all the Lebanese.”

Al-Alimi concluded by praising the work of certain key regional states, especially Saudi Arabia, in forging economic and social progress and curbing the spread of extremism.

“The Arab region is facing today a challenging test in building the state and in joining civilizational progress,” he said.

“The road to peace goes through the forces of moderation in the region, led by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, which has been defending international resolutions and which extended a helping hand by hosting millions of those fleeing wars and armed conflicts.

“Therefore, we’re grateful for its measures, and the world should depend on them to lay the foundations of peace and stability, and to maximize our benefit from their economic and social development.”


Health ministry in Gaza says war death toll at 41,534

Health ministry in Gaza says war death toll at 41,534
Updated 26 September 2024
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Health ministry in Gaza says war death toll at 41,534

Health ministry in Gaza says war death toll at 41,534
  • The toll includes 39 deaths in the previous 24 hours
  • Gaza rescuers say 15 killed in Israeli strike on school

GAZA STRIP, Palestinian Territories: Civil defense rescuers in Gaza said an Israeli strike Thursday on a school-turned-shelter killed at least 15 people, with the Israeli military saying it had targeted a Hamas command center.
The vast majority of the besieged Gaza Strip’s 2.4 million people have been displaced at least once by the war, sparked by Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel, with many seeking shelter in school buildings.
Civil defense agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal said there were “15 martyrs, including children and women, and dozens wounded, some of them seriously, following an Israeli bombardment of Al-Faluja school in Jabalia camp in north Gaza.”
Bassal earlier said the death toll was seven.
The military said it carried out “precise strikes” targeting Hamas militants operating inside what it said was a command-and-control center at the Al-Faluja school.
AFP was unable to immediately verify what was targeted, and the military statement did not provide information on casualties.
Thursday’s attack was the latest in a series of Israeli strikes on school buildings housing displaced people in Gaza, where fighting has raged for nearly a year.
A strike on the United Nations-run Al-Jawni School in central Gaza on September 11 drew international outcry after the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, said six of its staffers were among the 18 reported fatalities.
The Israeli military accuses Hamas of hiding in school buildings where thousands of Gazans have sought shelter — a charge denied by the Palestinian militant group.
The health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said on Thursday that at least 41,534 people have been killed in the war between Israel and Palestinian militants, now in its 12th month.
The toll includes 39 deaths in the previous 24 hours, according to the ministry, which said 96,092 people have been wounded in the Gaza Strip since the war began when Hamas militants attacked Israel on October 7.