US urges Saudis to allow
humanitarian aid immediately
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Yemen Middle East Donald Trump
According to Red Cross nearly 80 percent of
Yemeni residents need humanitarian aid to
survive [Anadolu]
The US has urged the Saudi-led
coalition to "facilitate the free flow of
humanitarian aid" in Yemen as millions
suffer in the war-torn country due to
the land and air blockade imposed by
the Saudis.
"The United States is gravely concerned
by the recent escalation in violence and
continued dire humanitarian conditions
in Yemen," the White House said in a
statement on Friday.
"We call on the Saudi-led coalition to
facilitate the free flow of humanitarian
aid and critical commercial goods,
including fuel, through all Yemeni ports
and to restore commercial flights
through Sanaa Airport."
In October, the
Saudi-led
coalition,
bombing Yemen
since March
2015, imposed a
total blockade on
the impoverished country after a rebel
missile was shot down near Saudi
capital Riyadh.
According to Red Cross, nearly 80
percent of Yemeni residents need
humanitarian aid to survive. Mounting
international pressure forced the Saudis
to allow some humanitarian aid in the
last week of November.
But the killing of former President Ali
Abdullah Saleh by Houthis, who control
vast expanses of the country, including
the capital Sanaa, has resulted in
violent clashes aggravating the
humanitarian situation further.
Dire humanitarian situation
The statement comes two days after US
President Donald Trump called on Saudi
Arabia to "completely allow food, fuel,
water, and medicine to reach the
Yemeni people who desperately need
it".
A senior US official, who did not want
to be named, told Reuters news agency
on Friday that the US had warned Saudi
Arabia of threats in Congress over the
dire humanitarian situation.
"We wanted to
be very clear
with Saudi
officials that the
political
environment
here could
constrain us if steps aren’t taken to ease
humanitarian conditions in Yemen," the
senior Trump administration official
said.
Speaking in Paris on Friday, Rex
Tillerson, US secretary of state, called
on Saudi Arabia to be "measured" in its
military operations in Yemen.
He demanded a "complete end" to the
Saudi-led blockade of Yemen so that
humanitarian aid and commercial
supplies could be delivered.
His comments came after at least 23
civilians were killed in Saudi air raids
in the country's north.
The US also condemned the Houthi
rebels, who overthrew the
internationally backed President Abd-
Rabbu Mansour Hadi from power in
September 2014. Hadi has since been
based in Saudi Arabia running a
government-in-exile.
"We condemn the Houthis' brutal
repression of political opponents in
Sana'a, including the killing of their
former ally [Ali Abdullah Saleh] and his
family members, as well as their
reckless missile attacks against the
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the
United Arab Emirates," the White
House said.
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