Ibn Dagher questions the alliance and covers the lies of the Brotherhood and the Houthis in an official template
English - Tuesday 01 June 2021 الساعة 10:44 amIn a move that appeared to openly question and incite the credibility of the Arab coalition, Ahmed bin Dagher called on Prime Minister Maeen Abdul-Malik to form a committee and send it to the islands of Socotra and Mayon to clarify what he said were "violations of Yemen's sovereignty."
Ibn Dagher, who is referred to the investigation with large corruption files, built his demand to form an investigation committee on the "circulating news" bubble - as he said in the text of his message - while the Arab coalition issued an official statement, published by the Saudi Press Agency, "SPA", denying the allegations of the existence of Emirati military forces in Socotra and Mayyun.
And last Thursday, the "SPA" quoted an official source in the coalition as saying that "there is no truth to the reports that talk about the presence of forces of the United Arab Emirates on the islands of Socotra and Mayon, and that what is available on the island of Mayon is under the control of the coalition leadership, and in what serves it." Enabling the legitimate forces and the coalition forces to confront the Houthi militia, secure maritime navigation, and support the West Coast forces.
And the Arab coalition blew up a joint and continuous Houthi Brotherhood campaign against the United Arab Emirates, which invokes the "sovereignty of Yemen" by relying on subterfuges that do not exist in reality. While he confirmed that the UAE's effort is currently focused on confronting the militia by air and defending Marib.
However, the statement, it seems, was not enough to persuade "Ibn Dagher" to stop repeating the allegations of the Brotherhood and the Houthis towards the coalition, as he tried to formalize the lies of the two groups, using a fictitious adjective obtained by a decision that contradicts the constitution and the law.
In a letter sent to the prime minister, Ibn Dagher demanded that a committee be formed from members of the House of Representatives, the Shura Council and the government, and sent to Mayon and Socotra islands, and "clarification of what is going on in violation of Yemeni sovereignty," he said.
He said, "The frequent news about the islands of Mayon and Socotra has left an increasing national concern over the Emirates' violation of the national sovereignty on the two islands."
Many promised Ibn Dagher's recent position that it does not deviate from the context of the gifts presented to the Houthis, because the campaign under the pretext of sovereignty comes with Saudi Arabia’s move to resume implementation of the provisions of the Riyadh Agreement, after the pro-Qatar and Turkey movement worked in the hierarchy of legitimacy, to disrupt it, in parallel with the mobilization of militias And his insistence on invading Aden and Abyan.
In this context, the Saudi writer Khaled al-Zaatar said that the dismissed Yemeni prime minister, Ahmed Ubaid bin Dagher, “is the Muslim Brotherhood’s tongue with which they attack the UAE,” while accusing him of questioning the recent statement of the Arab coalition on the islands of Socotra and Mayon.
Al-Zaatar said, in a series of tweets, on his Twitter account, “Despite the Arab coalition’s statement that there are no Emirati forces on the islands of Socotra and Mayon, Ahmed Obaid bin Dagher is still practicing incitement and suspicion.
He indicated that the UAE is the main bin Dagher case and not Iran's terrorist project.
He continued, "Since Bin Dagher was prime minister, he is considered the tongue of the Brotherhood with which they attack the Emirates. Bin Dagher continues the same role today by spreading Brotherhood lies about the existence of Emirati military bases in Socotra and Mayyun, despite the denial by the Arab coalition."
The Saudi writer continued, addressing Bin Dagher: "Your case should be to confront the Iranian project in Yemen and liberate Sanaa, not to create rumors targeting the UAE."