Public anger at government’s suspension of electricity fuel grant for Aden the capital
SMA NEWS – ADEN the Capital
The Secretary-General of the Council of Ministers, Mutee’ Ahmed Dammaj, suspended the electricity fuel grant for Aden the capital.
According to a document issued by the Secretary-General of the Council of Ministers, Chairman of the Steering Committee of the Saudi Fuel Grant, Mutee Dammaj, addressed to the Governor of Aden, Ahmed Lamlas, in which he confirmed the suspension of supplying Aden with oil derivatives designated for power stations in Aden the capital.
In his letter, Dammaj claimed that Aden Electricity Corporation does not supply to the joint account, considering this as violation of the terms of the agreement signed with the Saudi side regarding the Saudi grant.
This comes in the context of the war waged by legitimacy, and the forces controlling its decision against Aden and the Southern Transitional Council, and through which they used the ugliest methods to bring the southerners to their knees.
The capital, Aden, and the rest of the governorates under the control of the Southern Transitional Council, are considered the ones that supply revenues to the central bank, the main branch in the capital, Aden, while the Brotherhood’s governorates refuse to supply a single penny to the central bank and go to the legitimacy in Riyadh hotels.
The southern lawyer, Yahya Ghaleb Al-Shuaibi, said that the decision to stop the grant from the capital, Aden, is a dangerous decision targeting the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
Al-Shuaibi said, in a tweet on Twitter, that Saudi support for electricity in the liberated areas was cut off by Hadi’s legitimacy without any legal justification.
He pointed out that the grant agreement does not provide for cutting off fuel, whatever the reasons, but that Aden and the cities of the south are engulfed in darkness and deadly heat.
The southern academic, Jalal Hatem, considered cutting off electricity to Aden and the south in a hot summer and high humidity, a war crime committed by Hadi and his failed government.
Hatem said, on Twitter, that the Brotherhood’s Legitimacy Council of Ministers from Riyadh is directing to stop supplying Aden with the fuel it needs to run electricity, adding: “They are killing our children, our patients, our youth, our men and our women.”
The southern academic asked, is this a cabinet of the people or against the people? Isn’t this a war crime?
Regarding the silence of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia towards the absurdity of legitimacy in the south, Hatem said, addressing the Kingdom of Saudi: Do not share the Brotherhood’s crimes against us.