Arab coalition intercepts Houthi drone launched at Saudi Arabia

Arab coalition forces intercepted a Houthi drone launched from the Yemeni territory of Amran on Saturday, according to a report from the coalition. (AFP/File Photo)
Updated 09 September 2019
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Arab coalition intercepts Houthi drone launched at Saudi Arabia

  • The Houthis have fired dozens of missiles into Saudi Arabia in the four-year conflict, but most of them have been intercepted by the Saudi military

RIYADH: The Arab coalition supporting the legitimate government in Yemen on Saturday intercepted a Houthi drone targeting Saudi Arabia, the Saudi Press Agency reported.
Coalition spokesman Col. Turki Al-Maliki said the unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), launched from Yemen’s Amran province by the Iranian-backed terrorists, was the latest in a series of drone attacks in “clear violation” of international humanitarian law.
He added that the attempted strikes against civilian targets in the Kingdom reflected the desperation of the militia in the wake of heavy personnel and equipment losses and highlighted Iran’s “criminal” threat to regional and international security through its proxy terrorist agents.
Al-Maliki stressed the coalition’s joint determination to combat the Houthi attacks in line with international humanitarian rules.
On Friday, a ballistic missile launched by Houthi militia from the Harf Sufyan district of Amran, landed in the Yemeni city of Saadah, the coalition reported, and a day earlier the coalition intercepted a Houthi drone targeted at the Saudi city of Khamis Mushait. Another ballistic missile, fired from Saadah last Wednesday, also landed inside the governorate.
On Tuesday, the coalition destroyed a Houthi UAV launched from Amran while it was still in Yemeni airspace, and later the same day a second drone headed for Khamis Mushayt was also intercepted.

FASTFACT

Saudi Arabia led a coalition intervention in March 2015 to restore the UN-backed Yemeni government of President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, which the Houthi militia ousted.

Saudi Arabia and its Arab allies entered the war in Yemen in 2015 against the Houthis, who drove the internationally recognized government into exile in 2014.
The recent attacks are the latest launched by the militants, who have ramped up their efforts to target the Kingdom.
The Houthis have fired dozens of missiles into Saudi Arabia in the four-year conflict, but most of them have been intercepted by the Saudi military.
In July, an attack on Abha airport wounded nine civilians while a missile attack on June 12 on the same location wounded 26 civilians, drawing retaliatory strikes by the coalition on Houthi positions.
Another attack on June 23, also on the airport, killed a Syrian national and wounded 21 civilians, according to the coalition.


Saudi Arabia pays Yemeni government $346.6m to meet salary shortfall

Updated 26 February 2026
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Saudi Arabia pays Yemeni government $346.6m to meet salary shortfall

  • The payment is part of the Kingdom’s ongoing work to promote stability and development for the Yemenis

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia has provided $346.6 million (1.3 blln SAR) to help pay Yemeni government employees the massive shortfall in their salaries.

The payment, under a ruling by Saudi Arabia’s King Salman and crown prince Mohammed bin Salman, was delivered through the Saudi Program for Development and Reconstruction of Yemen (SDRPY).

The payment is part of the Kingdom’s ongoing work to promote stability and development for the Yemenis, the SDRPY said in a statement released on its X.com account.

The statement added that the initiative aimed to strengthen economic, financial and monetary stability in Yemen, enhance the capacity of government institutions, improve governance and transparency, and enable the private sector to drive sustainable economic growth.

Yemeni Presidential Leadership Council chairman Rashad Al-Alimi thanked the Saudi royals for the support, describing it as an extension of the Kingdom’s longstanding support for the Yemeni people.

And Al-Alimi said the support sent a message of confidence in Yemen’s path of recovery as well as the in the government’s ability to strengthen national institutions and reinforce security and stability.

Adding that Yemen’s ongoing partnership with Saudi Arabia represented an important choice for a more stable future.

And he called for a unified effort to support the reconstruction of the country’s instituions, as well as improve living conditions and advance economic and social development.