Algeria has begun the year by maintaining and reaffirming its foreign policy, which seems to be aimed at distancing itself from the West and aligning itself with countries such as Russia, China and Iran.
In this sense, Algiers has condemned the recent bombings by the United States and the United Kingdom against Houthi positions in Yemen after numerous threats and attacks by this Iranian-backed rebel militia on commercial ships since last November.
- How far will Algeria be able to resist Western pressure?
- Algeria distances itself from the interests of the West and Arab powers
According to a Foreign Ministry statement, “this dangerous escalation will undermine efforts by the United Nations and countries in the region to find a solution to the conflict in Yemen”. It should be noted that the US and British military actions followed several warnings against the Houthis, who were demanded to end hostilities in the Red Sea for the sake of international trade.
Still, Algiers has expressed “deep concern” over the bombings that hit “several cities in the sister Republic of Yemen”. The US and British attacks targeted an air base, airports and a military camp and left several fighters dead.
The attacks also took place in areas controlled by the Houthis, who have been waging an offensive against Yemen’s internationally recognised government for years. Also, during the years of civil war, the Houthis have been accused of violating the human rights of Yemeni civilians, as well as looting international humanitarian aid.
However, Algeria has not only expressed its rejection of US and UK retaliatory attacks, but has also abstained from voting on a UN Security Council resolution calling for an ‘immediate’ end to Houthi attacks on ships in the Red Sea as they ‘hinder international trade and undermine navigational rights and freedoms, as well as peace and security in the region’.
In addition to Algeria – a non-permanent member of the body for the 2024-2025 term – Russia, China and Mozambique also abstained from voting on the resolution, drafted by the US and Japan.
The resolution “condemns in the strongest terms the attacks – at least two dozen – on merchant and commercial vessels since 19 November 2023”, when the Houthis seized the ship Galaxy Leader and took its 25 crew hostage.
Algeria’s ambassador to the UN, Ammar Benjameh, argued that his country had abstained as it “believes that any military intervention in the region, especially in Yemen, should be approached with the utmost caution, and such an intervention may carry the risk of undermining previous efforts made by the United Nations”.
“The recent negotiations between Saudi Arabia and the Houthis generated great hope in the region regarding the possibility of resolving the conflict in Yemen,” he added.
Benjameh also stated that the Algerian delegation worked “so that the clear link between the Houthi attacks on commercial ships and what has been happening for three months in Gaza could not be ignored”. On 7 October, following an unprecedented and brutal Hamas attack on Israel that left 1,200 people dead and more than 200 kidnapped, the Israeli army began an air and then ground offensive against the terrorist group, which is hiding in the Gaza Strip, in order to eliminate its infrastructure and rescue hostages.
The Algerian diplomat stressed the need for the Security Council not to ignore the bombardment of Gaza, which has caused a serious humanitarian crisis. “We prefer to abstain from voting because we cannot associate ourselves with a text that ignores the 23,000 people who were killed during the last three months in Gaza,” Benjameh concluded.
According to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry, 23,000 people have died as a result of Israeli attacks. Israel, for its part, blames Hamas for the high number of civilian deaths in Gaza, accusing the terrorist group of using Gazans as “human shields”.
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