International News

Saudi Arabia asks UN to move aid workers in Yemen

UNITED NATIONS, United States, Feb 12, (APP/AFP): Saudi Arabia has
asked the United Nations to move aid workers away from rebel-held areas in Yemen as the Riyadh-led coalition presses on with air strikes against insurgents, according to a letter seen by AFP Thursday.
The United Nations flatly rejected the request and reminded Saudi
Arabia of its obligations to allow humanitarian access in Yemen, where coalition warplanes have been pounding Shiite Huthi rebels for nearly a year.
UN aid chief Stephen O’Brien said in a letter to Saudi Ambassador
Abdallah Al-Mouallimi that relief organizations were “delivering life-saving assistance as per internationally recognized principles and will continue to do so.”
Responding to O’Brien, the ambassador renewed the coalition’s request
that “humanitarian and relief organizations relocate from areas close to bases for military operations by Huthis and supporters” of ex-president Ali Abdullah Saleh.
“The coalition’s request is consistent with its obligations under
international humanitarian law, and, in no way, can be misinterpreted to
indicate any hindrance to humanitarian access and the delivery of humanitarian assistance in Yemen,” wrote Mouallimi on Monday.
O’Brien told Saudi Arabia that aid workers would continue to inform
coalition authorities of their movements.
UN and international aid workers have passed on their coordinates to
coalition military authorities to ensure they are not inadvertently targeted.