700 Houthi mines dismantled in Yemen under Masam project

Masam project has successfully removed 350,0421 mines since it was launched in 2018. (SPA)
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Updated 19 July 2022
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700 Houthi mines dismantled in Yemen under Masam project

  • The extraction included 320 anti-tank mines and 380 non-explosive ordnances

DUBAI: About 700 mines planted by the Houthi militia across Yemen were dismantled by the King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center’s (KSrelief) Masam project during the second week of July.
The extraction included 320 anti-tank mines and 380 non-explosive ordnances, bringing the total number of mines removed in July to 1,538, state-owned Saudi Press Agency reported.
The Masam team removed 54 anti-tank mines and 86 non-explosive ammunition in Aden, while 266 anti-tank mines and 294 non-explosive ammunition were extracted from Marib district.
The project has successfully removed 350,0421 mines since it was launched in 2018.
Earlier in June, KSrelief renewed the demining Masam project for a fifth year at a cost of $33.292 million.

Decoder

What is Masam?

Masam is the name of a project launched in 2018 by Saudi Arabia's aid agency King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSrelief) to clear Yemen of land mines. As of the second week of July 2022, Masam's demining team had removed 350,0421 mines — including antipersonnel mines and anti-tank mines and improvised explosive devices. Many of the mines are blamed on the Iran-backed Houthi militia, which had seized a large territory of Yemen, including the capital Sanaa, from the UN-recognized Yemeni government in 2014, prompting a coalition of Arab states to intervene and restore the government.


Jeddah governor attends ceremony marking Kuwait National Day

Updated 16 February 2026
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Jeddah governor attends ceremony marking Kuwait National Day

  • Fareed bin Saad Al-Shehri, director-general of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Makkah, and members of the diplomatic corps, were also in attendance

JEDDAH: Jeddah Gov. Prince Saud bin Abdullah bin Jalawi attended a ceremony in Jeddah on Sunday to mark Kuwait’s National Day.

Prince Saud was received by Kuwait’s Consul General Yousef Abdullah Al-Tunaib and other consulate officials, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

Fareed bin Saad Al-Shehri, director-general of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Makkah, and members of the diplomatic corps, were also in attendance.