Sarah A. Assiri is a first secretary who works with the Yemen Comprehensive Humanitarian Operations Support Center (YCHO), established in 2018. She works with a team to coordinate and help UN NGOs and INGOs working in Yemen to alleviate the suffering of the Yemeni people.
Assiri joined the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 2009, motivated by an admiration of the late Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud Al-Faisal, and worked in his office for almost seven years. She was also inspired by Dr. Thurayya Obeid, who was the executive director of the UN Population Fund and is now a Shoura Council member. She also help organizing conferences of Foreign Minister Adel Al-Jubeir, in which she sees an immediate opportunity to learn from the minister.
Assiri said that working closely with Saudi Ambassador to Yemen Mohammed bin Saeed Al-Jaber, who is the executive director of YCHO, and the supervisor of the Saudi Development and Reconstruction Program for Yemen, has been an opportunity to expand her understanding of diplomacy.
Assiri received her first international training in (2012) in Berlin in the Federal Foreign Office. She attended international meetings and conferences and attended several high-level meetings in Saudi Arabia and the UN.
She had an opportunity to speak about Yemen and Saudi efforts to support the humanitarian situation there, as well as discuss the YCHO plan, during the ECOSOC annual meetings of the UN in 2018.
Assiri is a published writer. Her first book, Contemplations, was about her grandmother’s battle with Alzheimer’s before her death. She is currently writing her first novel addressing topics of day to day life and human relations.
She is also a blogger with an interest in art and silent films, especially the work of Charlie Chaplin. She is a graduate of King Saud University with a master’s degree in English literature. She is a fan of W.B. Yeats, Joyce, Shakespeare and Arabic poetry.
TheFace: Sarah A. Assiri, first secretary at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
TheFace: Sarah A. Assiri, first secretary at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
- Assiri joined the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 2009, motivated by an admiration of the late Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud Al-Faisal
UAE’s Sheikh Tahnoon ‘welcome anytime’: Saudi media minister
- Sheikh Tahnoon “comes to the Kingdom whenever he wants without permission; it is his home and its leadership is his family,” the Kingdom’s media minister wrote on X
RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Media Minister Salman Al-Dossary refuted on Wednesday allegations circulating on social media that the Kingdom has denied entry to the UAE’s National Security Adviser Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed.
“What is being circulated about the Kingdom refusing to receive His Highness Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed is incorrect. His Highness comes to the Kingdom whenever he wants without permission; it is his home and its leadership is his family,” the minister wrote on X.
Sheikh Tahnoon is the Deputy Ruler of Abu Dhabi and brother of the UAE’s President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed.
Saudi Arabia’s Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan said on Tuesday that while there had been a “difference of view” between the two countries over Yemen, their relationship was “critically important” for regional stability.
“The Kingdom is always keen on having a strong, positive relationship with the UAE as an important partner within the GCC,” he said.
He said the UAE’s withdrawal from Yemen served as a “building block” for the relationship with the Emirates to continue strong.
Last month, Yemen’s internationally recognized government asked the UAE to withdraw its forces from the country after the separatist Southern Transitional Council (STC) that it supported seized large areas in the south and east.
The Saudi-led military Coalition to Support Legitimacy in Yemen said on December 30 that it had conducted a “limited” airstrike against shipments of smuggled weapons destined to the STC.
The UAE defense ministry said it completed a full withdrawal from Yemen on January 2.








