National Delegation Member: Security Council, UN Are About Political Sellouts, Do Not Care for Peace nor Global Security
Member of the National Delegation confirmed that the Security Council and the United Nations sell their positions to those who pay, and they do not care about peace or global security.
Abdulmalik Al-Ajri told Almasirah, on Tuesday, commenting on the Security Council’s decision to expand the embargo on Yemen, “The content of the Security Council resolution expanded the import ban to include all Ansarullah, not just leaders of the movement.” He explained that the Security Council did not designate Ansarullah as terrorist group because it does not have an agreed upon definition of terrorism, defining the concept of terrorism as a political and subject to the policies and agendas of countries, while the Security Council does not have a unified definition.
Surprisingly, he added, “The arms embargo decision contradicts the UN envoy’s claim about launching peace operations and dialogues, so how do you call for peace on a hand and escalate on the other?!”
Al-Ejri stressed that with this decision, the United Nations obstructs the peace process and takes peace efforts in vain, pointing out that these decisions prove that the Security Council and UN bodies are nothing more than companies serving American and Western interests.
He pointed out that the humanitarian situation in Yemen is in a catastrophic state, whether before or after this decision, noting that the Western ugliness of UN bodies is evident today in the events of Russia and Ukraine, and before that for tens of years in hundreds of crimes in which Arab and Muslim children were killed, and we did not see an honorable position for any of the human rights organizations .
He continued, “The globe suffers from the terrorism of US, France and UK, as they are the countries that have tortured humanity the most since the nineteenth century.”
Yemen’s officials have denounced a recent vote by the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) to expand a targeted UN arms embargo on several leaders of the popular Ansarullah resistance movement to the include all.
The 15-member body adopted on Monday the controversial anti-Ansarullah resolution, proposed by the United Arab Emirates, by 11 votes in favor to none against, with 4 abstentions. The resolution strongly condemns counterattacks by Yemen, including those on Saudi Arabia and the UAE, and demands their immediate cessation.