President Al-Mashat stresses keenness to establish the just peace demands of the Yemeni People
President Mahdi Al-Mashat, head of the Supreme Political Council, stressed that there can be no truce if it does not respond to the just demands of the Yemeni People.
This came during his meeting, Thursday, with the delegation of the brotherly Sultanate of Oman, who is currently visiting Yemen as part of the Sultanate’s efforts to bring peace to Yemen.
In the meeting, President Al-Mashat stressed Sana’a’s desire for a just and honorable peace that achieves stability and prosperity for the people of Yemen and the region in general.
President Al-Mashat said: “There can be no truce if you do not respond to the just and just demands of the Yemeni People represented in paying the salaries of all state employees from Yemen’s oil and gas wealth and opening all airports and ports, and there is no way to back down from protecting the oil and gas wealth of the Yemeni people.”
He added, “The patience of the Yemeni people is not endless,” warning that the Yemeni eople may be forced to take steps that would preserve their interests.
He expressed his strong dissatisfaction with the negative role played by America and Britain in Yemeni affairs, and the identification of the UN envoy with the misinformation campaigns led by America and Britain.
On Thursday, the head of the National Delegation Mohammed Abdulsalam confirmed that the visit of the Omani delegation to Sana’a comes as a continuation of the ongoing discussions about ways to end the US-Saudi aggression and lift the blockade as natural and human rights, peace cannot be achieved without them.
Abdulsalam had also confirmed that the visit of the Omani delegation comes to communicate the ideas and proposals that were carried out in the discussions with the Saudis and international parties.
He said, in a statement to Al-Masirah that the US-Saudi aggression makes promises that have no effect regarding the payment of state employees salaries, the end of the siege, and the departure of foreign forces.
He added that the aggression targeted the economic situation and greatly deepened the suffering by targeting the central bank and the currency.
Abdulsalam stressed the need to separate the humanitarian issue from military conflict, indicating that Sana’a’s demands a solution to all Yemenis, without exception, throughout the territory of Yemen.
Abdulsalam linked any progress in the negotiations to progress in the humanitarian issue represented in the payment of salaries and the opening of airports and ports, stressing that the salary issue must be separated in all circumstances.
An Omani delegation arrived Wednesday morning, accompanied by the head of the National Delegation Mohammed Abdulsalam to discuss the latest developments in light of the intransigence of the aggression and its refusal to stop the aggression, lift the siege and pay salaries to all state employees.