Adoption of the law on normalization of relations with the Zionist regime in Yemen

The Prime Minister of the Yemeni National Salvation Government announced that the country intends to draft a criminal law to normalize relations with the Zionist regime.

Faraan: The Prime Minister of the Yemeni National Salvation Government, Abdul Aziz bin Habtour, stressed that the country will soon pass a law criminalizing the normalization of relations with the Zionist regime. “We have decided to draft a criminal law to normalize relations with the Zionist regime,” Ben Habtour told Al-Masira news network.

He described the law criminalizing the normalization of relations as framing the wishes of the Yemeni people in the framework of the Yemeni constitution, and stressed that this is in line with Yemen’s position on the main issue of the Islamic world (Palestine). The Prime Minister of the National Salvation Government also noted that the Yemeni people stand by the people and the Palestinian resistance and the axis of resistance to confront the Zionist threats against Al-Aqsa and Al-Quds.

In the end, Ibn Habtour emphasized that the purpose of the Zionist tensions in Al-Aqsa is to pretend that the Zionist regime is in a victorious position. Meanwhile, the Iraqi parliament on the past Thursday, approved a draft law banning the normalization of relations with the Zionist regime. One of the most important clauses of this law is the criminalization of any political, security, economic, technical, cultural, sports and scientific cooperation with the Zionist regime under any title.

After the law was passed, Hakim al-Zamili, the deputy speaker of the Iraqi parliament, congratulated the Iraqi people and clarified: “The law, which was passed unanimously by the voters, is a true reflection of the will of the people, a courageous national and local decision that has been approved for the first time in the world in terms of criminalizing the relationship with the Zionist regime. Therefore, we call on the Arab and Islamic parliaments to issue similar laws that meet the demands of their people.”

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