COVID-19 claims 37 more lives in Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia announced 37 more deaths from the novel coronavirus COVID-19 and 3,927 new cases of the disease on Saturday. (File/SPA)
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Updated 27 June 2020
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COVID-19 claims 37 more lives in Saudi Arabia

  • The total number of recoveries in the Kingdom increased to 122,128 after 1,657 more patients recovered from the virus
  • A total of 1,511 people have succumbed to the virus in the Kingdom so far

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia announced 37 more deaths from the novel coronavirus COVID-19 and 3,927 new cases of the disease on Saturday.
Of the new cases, 535 were reported in Hufof, 408 in Makkah, 399 in Dammam, 234 in Abha and 209 in Khamis Mushait.
The total number of recoveries in the Kingdom increased to 122,128 after 1,657 more patients recovered from the virus.
A total of 1,511 people have succumbed to the virus in the Kingdom so far.


Saudi defense minister calls on Southern Transitional Council to de-escalate in Yemen

Updated 27 December 2025
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Saudi defense minister calls on Southern Transitional Council to de-escalate in Yemen

  • In a statement addressed “to our people in Yemen” and published on X, Prince Khalid said Saudi Arabia’s intervention came at the request of Yemen’s internationally recognized government

DUBAI: Saudi Defense Minister Prince Khalid bin Salman called on the Southern Transitional Council (STC) to respond to Saudi-Emirati mediation efforts and de-escalate tensions in eastern Yemen, urging the group to withdraw its forces from camps in Hadramout and Al-Mahra and hand them over peacefully to local authorities.
In a statement addressed “to our people in Yemen” and published on X, Prince Khalid said Saudi Arabia’s intervention came at the request of Yemen’s internationally recognized government and aimed to restore state authority across the country through the Decisive Storm and Restoring Hope operations.
He said the Kingdom has consistently treated the southern issue as a “just political cause” that must be resolved through dialogue and consensus, citing the Riyadh Conference and Riyadh Agreement as frameworks that ensured southern participation in governance and rejected the use of force.
The minister warned that recent events in Hadramout and Al-Mahra since early December had caused divisions that undermine the fight against Yemen’s common enemy and harm the southern cause. He praised southern leaders and groups who, he said, have acted responsibly to support de-escalation and preserve social stability.
Prince Khalid reaffirmed that the southern issue would remain part of any comprehensive political settlement in Yemen and stressed that it must be resolved through trust-building and national consensus, not actions that could fuel further conflict.