5 Planes at Sana’a Airport carrying 350 released prisoners from Saudi Arabia & western coast prisons

Two Yemeni Airlines planes and three planes of the International Committee of the Red Cross arrived on Saturday at Sana’a International Airport, carrying 350 heroic liberated prisoners from the prisons of the Saudi aggression and its mercenaries on the western coast within the agreement of Switzerland.

Where two Yemen Airways planes carried 250 prisoners coming from the Saudi city of Abha after their liberation from the prisons of the Saudi aggression, while three planes of the International Committee of the Red Cross arrived from Mocha, carrying 100 prisoners liberated from the prisons of the mercenaries of the aggression in the western region.

The heroic prisoners received an official and popular reception at the airport in honor and glorification of their positions, their great sacrifices, and the suffering they encountered in the prisons of the Saudi aggression and its mercenaries on the West Coast.

At the forefront of the audience were a member of the Supreme Political Council, Sultan Al-Sami, the Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives, Abd al-Salam Hashul Zabia, the Deputy Prime Minister for National Vision Affairs, Mahmoud Al-Junaid, the Chief of the General Staff, Major General Muhammad Abdul-Karim Al-Ghumari, the head of the Zakat Authority, Shamsan bin Nashtan, and the head of the The Military Committee, Major General Yahya Al-Razzami, a number of members of the House of Representatives and the Shura Council, and relatives and families of the prisoners.

At the reception, the head of the National Committee for Prisoners, Abd al-Qadir al-Murtada, told the Yemeni News Agency (Saba) that the number of prisoners released in the second batch of the Ramadan deal is 350 prisoners from the army and armed forces.

He said, “The prisoners arrived via two Yemeni Airlines planes from the Saudi city of Abha, and three planes belonging to the International Committee of the Red Cross from the city of Mokha.”

Al-Murtada indicated that 20 prisoners of aggression had been released, including 15 Saudis, three Sudanese, and two Yemenis.

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