Headlines
Saudi assures help in safe pullout of Indians from Yemen
New Delhi, March 31
Saudi Arabia has assured
India full assistance in safe evacuation of Indians stranded in
strife-hit Yemen as Minister of State for External Affairs V.K. Singh
flew to Djibouti on Tuesday to oversee evacuation efforts.
Saudi
King Salman bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud spoke to Prime Minister Narendra Modi
on Monday night and assured him of his "full attention to the safety of
Indians in Yemen and all possible assistance for their early and safe
evacuation".
The Saudi monarch called up Modi at 9.30 p.m. The
prime minister shared his "deep concern about the safety and welfare of
approximately 4,000 Indians in Yemen". He also briefed King Salman on
India's evacuation plan and requested him for support and cooperation in
it.
The Saudi monarch "recalled the strong and close relations
between India and Saudi Arabia and assured the prime minister of his
full attention to the safety of Indians".
Modi expressed his
gratitude "and conveyed his best wishes to His Majesty for a quick
resolution of the challenges in the region and early restoration of
peace and stability under his leadership. The prime minister also
reaffirmed his commitment to further strengthening India's close
relations with Saudi Arabia," said a statement.
On Monday, India
evacuated 400 Indians from Aden through sea route by a local craft which
took them to Djibouti. In Djibouti, India has stationed five diplomats,
including three senior officials of the external affairs ministry, to
assist in the efforts.
V.K. Singh is to oversee the evacuation operations at Djibouti from where Indians are to be flown back home.
The
Indian Air Force has been asked to deploy two Globemaster aircraft to
ferry those in Djibouti to India. The Air India has stationed two
flights in Muscat.
An Indian Navy ship INS Sumitra is also in the
region. The navy is pressing into service two more ships -- INS Mumbai
and INS Tarkash. Two passenger liners with a total capacity of 1,100 are
travelling towards Yemen and would reach there in four-five days,
external affairs ministry spokesperson Syed Akbaruddin said on Monday.
India is also in touch with regional leaders and will seek their assistance in this difficult situation, he said.
The
Saudi Arabia-led aerial bombing campaign against Houthi rebels in Yemen
continued for the fifth day on Monday. The air strikes are aimed at
forcing Houthi rebels to hand power back to President Abed Rabbu Mansour
Hadi.
Around 40 people were killed on Monday and 200 wounded in an air strike at al-Mazraq camp.