Iranian Foreign Minister Reiterates Tehran Never Provided Weapons To Houthis In Yemen
Umer Jamshaid Published December 15, 2018 | 07:16 PM
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif has once again refuted allegations that Iran provides weapons to the Houthi movement in Yemen to support its struggle against the government.
"We've never provided weapons to Houthis. The Houthis use the weapons provided to them by Saudi Arabia ... with Saudi money buying weapons from Russia, buying weapons from China, and buying weapons from North Korea ... You are looking at the wrong address if you ask Iran," Zarif said at the Doha Forum in Qatar.
At the same time, Zarif stressed that the Saudi-led coalition's bombing of Yemeni people was an obvious fact that needed no extra evidence.
"I don't need to show any evidence about the jets that are flying in Yemen, bombing the Yemenis. Those are American-made jets, and those are Saudi fighters, I assume ... There are facts about US weapons, there are facts about Saudi bombing," he said.
Saudi Arabia is interested in increasing tensions in the region, and the examples of blockade of Qatar and the military operation in Yemen prove that, the minister stressed.
"Unfortunately, Saudi Arabia does not want to reduce tensions.
Actually, Saudi Arabia believes that it is in its interest to increase tensions. Look at what they did with Qatar. Look at how they imprisoned the prime minister of another country. Look at what they are doing in Yemen," Zarif said.
Yemen has been engulfed in an armed conflict between the government forces led by President Abd Rabbuh Mansour Hadi and the Houthi rebels for several years. The Saudi-led coalition has been carrying out airstrikes against the Houthis at Hadi's request since March 2015.
The fighting has recently intensified near the Houthis-controlled city of Al Hudaydah, through which the rebels receive humanitarian and commercial cargoes. The Yemeni government, in turn, claims that the port city is receiving weapons from Iran.
On Thursday, the UN-mediated discussions on Yemen in Sweden between the warring sides resulted in an agreement to cease hostilities and withdraw forces in Al Hudaydah. The parties agreed to create a UN-chaired monitoring committee in addition to establishing humanitarian corridors to the city of Taiz. The sides also agreed to exchange more than 4,000 war prisoners in late January 2019.
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