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Several protesters staging a civil disobedience action were led away handcuffed by New York police outside the U.S. mission to the UN. Activists were holding “Let Yemen Live” and “Stop Bombing Yemen” placards.
In New York, protesters were told to disperse by police outside the U.S. mission to the UN Dec. 11, before several of them are seen on Facebook live being handcuffed in zip ties and taken into custody.
“I’m here because I am very concerned by the influence of the Saudi, Israeli, U.S. military intelligence establishment on the entire U.S. war machine, the so-called war on terror,” said Sander Hicks before he was led away in a Facebook Live post.
The NYPD could not confirm how many people were taken into custody. The activists could be handed desk summons or could be arrested.
Mr. Hicks said he was joined by members from Veterans for Peace, the Catholic Workers, Grannies for Peace, and Refuse Fascism and Code Pink who later marched to the Saudi Arabian Consulate to the UN.
Code Pink, a women-led peace and social justice movement, organized protests across the U.S. at Saudi Arabian consulates in Houston, Texas, Washington, D.C. and Los Angeles, California.
Activists were demonstrating against the U.S. supported Saudi-led war on Yemen, which has induced one of the largest man-made humanitarian crisis.
The Saudi-led war on Yemen began in March 2015, as an effort to restore ousted President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi. Unable to defeat the loyalists of former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, aided by Houthi rebels which the Saudis claimed are backed by Iran, the coalition imposed a blockade on Yemen.
The coalition includes the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, Jordan, Morocco, Sudan, Egypt and Pakistan. The United States said it was assisting with intelligence, targeting, and logistics.
The war and blockade has plunged Yemen into a major humanitarian disaster, leaving 20 million people in need of aid. More than 11,000 civilians are feared to have been killed in the conflict.
President Donald Trump Dec. 6 called on Saudi Arabia to immediately lift the blockade of Yemen and allow in food, fuel and medicine, citing humanitarian reasons.
Mr. Trump’s call follows a UN appeal for a “humanitarian” stop to airstrikes and fighting in Yemen, in order to allow for the delivery of aid to civilians trapped in the capital Sana’a.
Mr. Saleh was killed after he tried to break off the alliance with the Houthis and negotiate with the Saudi coalition. U.S.-backed Saudi coalition forces renewed their attacks on Sana’a in order to back up Mr. Saleh’s supporters. Violent clashes in the capital have resulted in at least 125 deaths, AP reported citing aid groups. (RT.com)