Houthis call donors' conference as failure launching open tweet campaign to demand lifting of siege on Yemen

Sana`a (Debriefer)
2020-06-03 | Since 4 Month

The prominent leader of the Ansar Allah group (Houthis), Mohammed Ali Al Houthi, commented on Tuesday, on the donors ’conference for Yemen, which was called by both the United Nations and Saudi Arabia, saying that“ the aggression of the coalition and its siege on Yemen are what brought the people to the bottom. ”

Al-Houthi, in tweets on his account on Twitter, called the donors' conference, which held its business sessions on Tuesday in the Saudi capital, Riyadh, as "a failure."

"The numbers will not bear fruit," he added. "What was given to Yemen with a stay of execution in a previous conference is more than what was granted in the donors' conference today."

He added, "The demand to fulfill the pledges and obligations during the days of the aggression is almost not devoid of briefings in the Security Council."

In addition, the Houthi group launched a campaign of open tweets at nine in the evening on the social networking site "Twitter", to demand the support of Yemen by lifting the siege on it.

The group said that the goal of the campaign is "to break the continuation of the international and international coverage of the aggression and the siege on Yemen," noting that the campaign "comes as a rejection of the Yemen Donors Conference, accusing Saudi Arabia of hosting the conference to" beautify its ugly criminal face. "

Several countries announced during the work of the donors conference, which opened its work on Tuesday evening, their donation of financial amounts to support the relief field, through the United Nations organizations, including Germany, which provided 125 million euros, as the European Union announced its endeavor to provide 71 million euros in aid to Yemen, through United Nations organizations.

Britain provided about 160 million pounds, Sweden 30 million dollars, the Netherlands donated 15 million euros and Norway 175 million euros to support the humanitarian response plan in Yemen.

“When the pledges are paid literally means the difference between life and death for countless Yemeni people,” said UN under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs Mark Lowcock, adding " I reiterate the plea the secretary-general made to all those who made pledges to pay them straightaway, because pledges on their own achieve nothing.”

Lowcock also called on countries that had not yet pledged to do so as soon as possible, and added that the UN will continue its fundraising efforts. “This is not the end,” he said.

Today, international donors pledged 1.35 billion dollars in humanitarian aid to Yemen, said Mark Lowcock, the United Nations humanitarian and emergency relief coordinator during the donors ’conference to help Yemen.

The Saudi ambassador to Yemen, Mohammed Al Jaber, announced Monday that his country will contribute half a billion dollars to finance the humanitarian response plan in Yemen, of which 300 million dollars will be provided through international organizations.

The total sums achieved by the Riyadh Donors Conference to support the 2020 UN response plan in Yemen have not yet been finalized.

The work of the Yemen Donors' Conference started Tuesday in the Saudi capital, Riyadh, with the aim of helping to raise about $ 2.4 billion, while lack of funding threatens the largest aid operation in the world.

The Secretary-General of the United Nations, Antonio Guterres, said at the opening of the conference, that the risks threaten 24 million Yemenis, including the new Coronavirus (Covid_19), calling on the international community to help Yemen.

 


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