South Arabia

Al-Khubaji meets the official of the Arabian Peninsula division at the British Foreign Office and Commonwealth

[su_label type=”info”]SMA News – Aden — Exclusive[/su_label]

 

Dr. Nasser Al-Khubaji, member of the Presidency of the Southern Transitional Council, Head of the Negotiations Affairs Unit, Director of the Transitional Team in the Joint Committee to follow up the procedures of implementing the Riyadh Agreement, received at his residence in the Saudi capital, Riyadh, Mrs. Helen Winterton, the official of the Arabian Peninsula division at the Foreign Office and Commonwealth in the Kingdom United Kingdom, accompanied by Ambassador Michael Aaron.
Dr. Al-Khubaji expressed the gratitude of the Southern Transitional Council to the efforts of the United Kingdom in bringing peace and stability to the region, and pointed to the positive interaction of the Southern Transitional Council in implementing the terms of the Riyadh Agreement.
Al-Khubaji mentioned the role that the Shabwani elite and the security belt embodied in Abyan and Shabwa in combating terrorism and establishing security and stability during the last period, pointing to the importance of speeding up the implementation of the terms of the Riyadh Agreement to reach restoring security and stability in various regions of the south and to maintain security and social peace and combat terrorism and secure export power lines, international shipping, and combating illegal immigration.
Al-Khubaji praised the role of the Arab coalition led by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates in supporting the southern forces to combat terrorism and crime and restore security and stability in the south.
For their part, the two British officials expressed their happiness for the positive spirit of the Transitional Council for the implementation of the Riyadh Agreement, and stressed that the United Kingdom urges everyone and hopes for them to accelerate the implementation of the Riyadh Agreement, as the longer the implementation is delayed, the greater the obstacles and the cost doubles.

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