Yemen grants ‘Medal of Bravery’ to Saudi Masam Project

Masam is a Saudi initiative overseen by KSRelief. (Twitter/@Masam_ENG)
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Updated 27 June 2023
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Yemen grants ‘Medal of Bravery’ to Saudi Masam Project

  • The Masam Project’s work is to continue in Yemen for a sixth year after KSrelief reiterated its support for the scheme
  • The project has so far managed to extract 405,213 explosives in Yemen, including 251,410 unexploded ordnances

RIYADH: Rashad Al-Alimi, the chairman of Yemen’s Presidential Leadership Council, granted the “Medal of Bravery” to his country’s Executive Mine Action Center and Saudi Arabia’s Masam Project on Monday.

The award is in recognition of the project’s efforts in clearing land mines on Yemeni soil.

Masam is a Saudi initiative overseen by the King Salman Center for Relief and Humanitarian Aid, which is dedicated to providing philanthropic aid across the globe. KSrelief currently has 2,402 ongoing and completed projects in 92 countries in its list of accomplishments.

The Masam Project’s work is to continue in Yemen for a sixth year after KSrelief reiterated its support for the scheme, which began in June 2018.

The project has so far managed to extract 405,213 explosives in Yemen, including 251,410 unexploded ordnances, 7,836 devices, 139,709 anti-tank mines, and 6,258 anti-personnel mines.


Death toll rises to at least 10 in violence around Iran protests

Updated 11 sec ago
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Death toll rises to at least 10 in violence around Iran protests

DUBAI: Violence surrounding protests in Iran sparked by the Islamic Republic’s ailing economy killed two other people, authorities said Saturday, raising the death toll in the demonstrations to at least 10 as they showed no signs of stopping.
The new deaths follow US President Donald Trump warning Iran on Friday that if Tehran “violently kills peaceful protesters,” the United States “will come to their rescue.” While it remains unclear how and if Trump will intervene, his comments sparked an immediate, angry response from officials within the theocracy threatening to target American troops in the Mideast.
The weeklong protests, have become the biggest in Iran since 2022, when the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in police custody triggered nationwide demonstrations. However, the protests have yet to be as widespread and intense as those surrounding the death of Amini, who was detained over not wearing her hijab, or headscarf, to the liking of authorities.
The deaths overnight into Saturday involved a new level of violence. In Qom, home to the country’s major Shiite seminaries, a grenade exploded, killing a man there, the state-owned IRAN newspaper reported. It quoted security officials alleging the man carried the grenade to attack people in the city, some 130 kilometers (80 miles) south of the capital, Tehran.
Online videos from Qom purportedly showed fires in the street overnight.
The second death happened in the town of Harsin, some 370 kilometers (230 miles) southwest of Tehran. There, the newspaper said a member of the Basij, the all-volunteer arm of Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard, died in a gun and knife attack in the town in Kermanshah province.
Demonstrations have reached over 100 locations in 22 of Iran’s 31 provinces, the US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency reported.
Iran’s civilian government under reformist President Masoud Pezeshkian has been trying to signal it wants to negotiate with protesters. However, Pezeshkian has acknowledged there is not much he can do as Iran’s rial has rapidly depreciated, with $1 now costing some 1.4 million rials. That sparked the initial protests.