Arab coalition destroys Houthi mine in Red Sea off Yemen, 3 projectiles fall in Jazan

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The Arab coalition said that it had removed and destroyed a total of 171 sea mines in the REd Sea randomly deployed by the Iranian-backed Houthi militia. (File/SPA)
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Three military projectiles launched by Yemen's Houthi militia fell in Jazan, Saudi Arabia on Dec. 18, 2020. (SPA)
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Three military projectiles launched by Yemen's Houthi militia fell in Jazan, Saudi Arabia on Dec. 18, 2020. (SPA)
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Updated 18 December 2020
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Arab coalition destroys Houthi mine in Red Sea off Yemen, 3 projectiles fall in Jazan

  • The mine was an Iranian-made Sadaf model, coalition said
  • Houthis launched 3 military projectiles towards Jazan

RIYADH: The Arab coalition said on Friday that it had discovered and destroyed a marine mine planted by the Houthi militia in the southern Red Sea, Saudi state TV reported.
The coalition said that the mine discovered was Iranian-made and was a Sadaf type of mine.
It also said that, to date, it had removed and destroyed a total of 171 sea mines randomly deployed by the Iranian-backed Houthis.
The coalition added that the Houthi militia's hostilities and actions, with Iran’s support, threatened the security of the Bab Al-Mandab Strait, which connects the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aden and is a vital global energy gateway.

The media spokesperson for Jazan’s civil defense, Col. Mohammed bin Yahya Al-Ghamdi, said that the authority received a report that three military projectiles were launched by the Houthi militia from inside Yemeni territories toward Al-Harath governorate in Jazan.
All three had landed, one of which fell in a vacant lot 197 meters away from Al-Harath General Hospital, and the other two projectiles fell into another vacant lot but did not result in any injuries or damages.


SDAIA president says Saudi Arabia is building an integrated AI ecosystem

Updated 9 sec ago
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SDAIA president says Saudi Arabia is building an integrated AI ecosystem

RIYADH: Saudi Data and Artificial Intelligence Authority President Abdullah Al-Ghamdi says that Saudi Arabia is moving steadily to establish artificial intelligence as a trusted national capability, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

Guided by the objectives of Saudi Vision 2030, Al-Ghamdi said the goal is to use AI to help develop government services, enhance competitiveness, build human capacity and improve quality of life through a comprehensive strategy based on three main pillars that unlock the potential of this technology and achieve sustainable developmental impact.

“The first pillar focuses on building human capacity and enhancing readiness to engage with AI technologies,” he said.

The second pillar is building an integrated national AI ecosystem that drives expansion and innovation by developing advanced digital infrastructure that enables various sectors to adopt AI applications efficiently, consistently and with effective governance, Al-Ghamdi said.

The third pillar, he said, is governance that ensures responsible and measurable AI through a national framework aligned with international standards.

This came during Al-Ghamdi’s speech at a high-level ministerial session held on Thursday on the sidelines of the AI Impact Summit 2026 in New Delhi.

He is heading the Saudi delegation, and the session saw broad participation from heads of state, decision-makers and technology leaders from around the world.

Al-Ghamdi also had a meeting with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday evening, discussed AI cooperation and expressed his gratitude for hosting the summit and for the hospitality extended to the participants.