Civil Service Minister: Use of Oil and Gas Revenues, Solution to Pay All Salaries
The Minister of Civil Service, Salim Al-Moghales, confirmed on Friday Sanaa’s commitment to open an account for salaries, while the US-aggression repudiated its commitment to cover the gap since the Stockholm negotiations.
“We accepted the opening of a salary account in the Sweden negotiations to block the pretexts, and the oil and gas resources are the guarantee to pay all salaries,” Al- Moghales said.
For his part, Undersecretary of the Ministry of Finance Ahmed Hajar said that “The salaries owed to employees on the public treasury exceed 4 years.”
He added, “Government employees represent 34% of the size of the workforce, and this indicates the extent of the impact of salaries in terms of returning them or cutting them in advance, stressing that the aggression coalition has fragmented the Central Bank of Yemen after transferring it to 4 independent banks in Aden, Hadramout, Al-Mahra and Marib under Saudi supervision.”
He explained that the transformation of the Central Bank of Yemen into a depositor with the National Bank of Saudi Arabia means its loss of sovereignty.
The deal stipulates halting offensive military operations, including cross-border attacks, and allowing fuel-laden ships to enter Yemen’s lifeline al-Hudaydah port and commercial flights in and out of the airport in the capital Sana’a “to predetermined destinations in the region.”
The period specified for the military humanitarian truce is nearing its end, and the US-Saudi aggression seems to be in a hurry to adopt the option of extending for the third time to freeze the battle in Yemen and its economic repercussions away from global energy markets.
The forces of aggression are pushing for an extension, not out of concern for peace, but rather out of fear that the escalation will add more complications to the international scene in addition to the crisis imposed by the Russian-Ukrainian war.
A truce, the positive effects of which have not been felt by the citizens over the past months, despite its broad headlines. Commercial flights to Cairo are still stumbling until today, and the navy of aggression continues to pursue fuel ships without respect for agreements or any regard for international laws and norms.
Double standards regarding the violations of the forces of aggression and its provocative practices is a double UN policy that has brought the crisis in Yemen to its current level of misery and deprivation that has affected everyone far from justice and the realization of the rights of the Yemeni people.
The Supreme Political Council requires, in order to extend the truce, the commitment of the Saudi-led aggression to pay the salaries of all employees and the rest of the services, as a natural entitlement that is not subject to extortion. Before that, the complete blockade of Sana’a airport and the port of Hodeidah must be lifted as a criterion for demonstrating the seriousness and goodwill in the faltering peace process in Yemen.