Head of European Institute Expects Investment Companies to Flee from UAE
The head of the European Institute of Law and International Relations, Mahmoud Refaat, expected companies and investors to flee from the Emirates.
In a tweet, Refaat, said: “Sana’a strategic missile strikes against UAE will extend and reach all seven emirates until the aggression against Yemen stops.” He stressed that the development of Yemeni Armed Forces military capabilities, despite the siege, remains astonishing.
Refaat pointed out that Yemen has turned into the worst humanitarian disaster on the planet, due to the impunity of Saudi Arabia and the UAE for their crimes against humanity. In another tweet, Refaat considered that the visit of the president of the Zionist entity to Abu Dhabi is a new mockery of the Emirates and its rulers, because the position of the president is ceremonial and does not have any decision in the army and government of the entity.
Earlier, The Yemeni Armed Forces announced its military operation ‘Yemen’s Hurricane 3’, which targeted the depth of the state of the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
“The large-scale military operation hit qualitative and important targets in Abu Dhabi with a number of Zulfiqar ballistic missiles, and sensitive targets in Dubai with a number of Sammad-3 drones,” the Armed Forces spokesman Brigadier General Yahya Sare’e said in a statement.
The Armed Forces reiterated that “the Emirati enemy state will remain unsafe as long as Abu Dhabi and Dubai Rulers, Israeli agents continue to launch aggression against our people and our country.”
The Armed Forces also renewed its warning to citizens, residents and companies to stay away from vital facilities, as they are vulnerable to targeting during the coming period.
The statement stressed that the Armed Forces will not “stand idly by while Yemenis are suffering from the Saudi-UAE suffocating siege and war crimes.”
“We will continue to legitimately defend dear Yemen until the aggression stops and the siege is lifted,” Sare’e concluded.
Source: Websites.