 We're delighted to witness this. in Yemen, which has recently been mentioned about Yemen and about the disarmament in Yemen and the implementation of the implementation. We will discuss in this action how this may be a threat to Yemen and the international community, while trying to avoid this disarmament, and put the strategies for the development of the U.S. in Yemen. I would like to welcome the special envoy for Yemen, Mr. Timothy Ledgeking, the UNDP Assistant Minister, Dr. Kalida, and the rest of the members of the U.N.D.P. who do not know the U.S. IP, which is the American Institute for Peace. It was founded in 1984, in the decision of the Congress, because peace is my job and it is necessary for the security of the United States. Here, we are trying to prevent, reduce, and resolve the disarmament, the building, and the establishment of the UNDP in all parts of the world. One of our main duties is to help in the situation of politics, through conversations, like today's conversations, regarding the addition of the officials of the governments, the teachers, and the international community. In Yemen, the U.S. IP supported building the capabilities of the international community, and the local initiative to support the disarmament and solve the disarmament and build peace. We have continued to focus on the positive role that women play, and the importance of dealing with the related issues of women and children. After approximately seven years of the violent conflict in Yemen, it continues to lead to great suffering and a great humiliation. The disarmament killed hundreds of thousands, and it also led to many losses, and the negotiations failed, and the compensation of the future remains in place. We say that if the disarmament continues until 2030, then 1.3 million people will die as a result of that. The future of Yemen is in the balance now. The conflict in Yemen is complicated and numerous. In order to stop the human suffering in Yemen and the international community, the country must work with all the countries to solve the problem. We must put forward the building of the work that Yemen and the international community have done, and we must return to how we are able to go all the way to the table. We must include the whole society in order to change the reality and the future. In order to succeed, there must be a leader of the youth, the military and the politicians, the youth, the youth and the civil society, and the leaders of the tribes. When peace is achieved, Yemen and the civil society must work together, and we must have a sustainable economic strategy. UNDP's report found that a complete and comprehensive effort enables women to grow and build a private sector that may lead to the end of poverty in Yemen during the next generation. I will look at our discussions about this and listen to our speakers. After their words, we will have a link to the results of the report, and then there will be a discussion with the conversation team, the experts and the lecturers. I am now happy to present the first two speakers. Dr. Tim Lutter King is the US special envoy for the United States, and since he took this position, he came with the power needed to end this violent conflict in Yemen. Before that, he was the president of the United States who was the head of the United States. Before that, he was the president of the United States, and he was the head of the United States in 2013-2016. He was the head of the former diplomatic circuit. Dr. Khalida Bizar has 35 years of experience in leadership and development, and he has 25 years in the United Nations. He has a passion for sustainable development, to reduce poverty, and to provide a sustainable impact. He is an expert on the development of the United States, and on the consequences of these consequences. He has worked in many countries around the world on issues related to the development of the areas, the change in the areas of agriculture and others. He focused on the Arab region, but he also worked on other areas in the world. He is honored to be with us today to be part of your vision of peace and stability in Yemen. Thank you very much, Mike. Thank you very much, Mike, for being here with us. Thank you to the USIP and UNDP for their support. This is what I want to say to Dr. Khalida and other guests. This morning, thank you for inviting me to give you the main message for what I think is an important dialogue. Thank you very much, Mike. Thank you very much, Mike. Thank you very much, Mike. Thank you very much, Mike. Thank you very much, Mike. Thank you very much, Mike. Thank you very much, Mike. We are under pressure for a total of $3.9 billion. We will continue to do our best to support the Yemeni people and to provide them with help, as they did in the past. There is something related to economic help. We are helping other partners to provide economic help to deal with the infrastructure, the cost of the salaries, and the crisis in Bukut. Currently, we are in an agreement with the military operations, and I would like to say once again that there is no military solution to the conflict in Yemen that continues to urinate and the international community continues to put the sides on the reduction of the pressure, and we cannot make sure more of their commitment under the law of the international human being. I would like to make it clear that when we talk about the protection of civilians, we are also the citizens of the Americans who live in the Gulf, and their security is from our national security. And we also want to provide them with the necessary jobs in the factory. We want to get their salaries. There are criminal attacks on civilian areas in that city, and the attacks against the refugees and the refugees' camps. We saw that the refugee attacks in the past were the main cause for these crimes. The refugee losses in Yemen are the last thing you have to share with them, and to all the other parties, that there is no military solution. The United States is the only country in the United States with the increase of the number of strikes between the civilians in Yemen, and we will continue to talk about this with the parties. Now, in the past year, the American Diplomacy effort has been translated to the two key points to open the path in front of the peace in Yemen. First, we have increased cooperation in the international community on the need for a political solution and to stop the fire. Second, we have increased cooperation in the more social work in Yemen, taking into account the positive views in all of Yemen and increasing the majority of Yemenis who are asking for the end of the fight. I personally have talked to Yemenis because of the fact that women and young people, people who are suffering from a disease or are addicted, and are in the civil society, in order to have more social cooperation and to raise the voices of peace, justice, and justice. As the people of the United Nations have said, we are listening to these different Yemeni perspectives to help us in this effort and to raise the voice of Yemenis. It must be clear to all that the attacks of the terrorists will increase the suffering. Take us into consideration that there is no military solution and the only way forward is dialogue. We feel that this dialogue must be led by the Yemenis and that the civil society's role is to create space for the Yemenis to come to the table. This is in the context of Yemeni-Yemeni conflict. And does Yemenis need to end the conflict in the opposite of the human crisis? I can assure the Yemeni people that we will be with you and support you as we did in the past. I hope that these two women will open the field in front of the peace in Yemen. I hope that the United Nations will be more open to the ceasefire and the security of peace. And the conflict and the conflict around the security of peace will be more common in the joint effort. I think it will be because with all these efforts that the peace in Yemen is possible. 2022 will be a new opportunity and the United Nations will be committed to this. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you for the special message for Turkey. Dr. Khalida, the angelic word. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. I think I will start by thanking the USIP for their contribution to this very important event. I am honored to be speaking with you, or with you, Mr. Lander King, from the Sururi Foundation and honored. We as UNDP are committed to all the support that the United States offers to Yemen and other countries. As I mentioned, the situation is really critical in all parts of the country. And the increase and increase in the last few months is more than the human resources. While 21 million people are now in need of the kind of human resources and protection. The impact of the virus and its spread means that Yemenis cannot afford to pay for their food. This increases the number of poor people. And the food crisis has really been decreasing in the last two years since 2019. And the question is, are women and children suffering from the Yemeni population? More than half of Yemeni people, about 16 million people, face hunger. And only 50% of Yemenis have a low unemployment rate. And the rest of the country has increased or decreased the rate of vaccination. And the rate of consumption is reduced if it is not less than the rate of vaccination in the region. There is a daily work that happens in all parts of Yemen to help Yemenis. And to help them with the crisis. And we are working with the other international community. And through the success of the European Union and the International Bank, we help Yemenis to preserve their dignity and to maintain the institutions and to establish a strong foundation that will be strong for the benefit of when they return to peace. And I hope that they will return soon. Our work continues to relate to human work. We are working with the foundation for the distribution of living and small companies for the future. Just to give you an example, we felt the possibility of reaching more than 5 million Yemenis for the basic services. And more than half a million Yemenis have the possibility of reaching energy through the solar energy project. And we have reduced the unemployment rate in many of the areas. All of this is very good. We are very proud of our work and we are very proud of it. But despite that, what Yemenis need today is a peaceful distribution of this kind of poverty to end their suffering. In the third reading of the speech today, we are showing how, at the end of the war, the future is much more possible for Yemen and some of the poverty-related activities for the war will be the opposite. The speech is expected to be that if the war stops in 2022, or this year, the poverty-related poverty will be reduced to one generation. If we continue to work together in 2050, we will have the possibility of Yemen to be a prosperous country with a medium-sized income and a future for all the people. The speech confirms that if the war continues, the impact on people's lives will be much more. The poverty-related poverty will be much more and the possibility of the recovery in a near future will increase. If the recovery continues until 2030, and you mentioned that, Mr. Yafi, 1.3 million people are expected to be 75 per cent and that will be the reason why it is not suitable for anyone. 1.5 million children will die every 5 minutes I think it is wrong. It is very important to start with the survival of hundreds of thousands and also to improve the way they live. And the peace alone will not be enough. Therefore, the peace should come with a full-scale effort to focus on the human being and on the individual, in order to maintain a national sovereignty and a national leadership through the Yemeni people and also to organize through the international community, as was mentioned a little while ago. The possibility of this effort to give hope to the Yemeni people and hope for us if the war stops now, in 2030, we will see that 85 billion will be more in GDP and we will be able to save 445,000 lives. We see that the main purpose of this is to ensure that 50 per cent of the Yemeni people will be successful. Therefore, it is not surprising that their participation in the political, economic and social role is very important for a human being. I would like to tell you, as a woman, that most of what we are talking about is about the role of the woman in the development and the work of peace, without really making the woman therefore, the woman should be put in the form of development and in the form of reconciliation in Yemen and out of Yemen, or after Yemen, or in the form of reform in Yemen. I am not sure that the side of Ben-Ban between the Yemenis has reduced their ability to get to basic services such as health care, food and education. I am not sure that we will leave Yemen and us. In order to enable the Yemenis, they should work together as a society for the end of the war and for the end of the war now. The end of the war is a wonderful way for the future of production and production. And I know that Mr. Leonard King, who is working tirelessly and working tirelessly on the political side of the war, can rely on our support as a national family. We will be with you and I hope that he and I can come with more hope for the Yemeni people. I hope that we can come to them in peace and also in reconciliation. Thank you very much. Thank you, Dr. Leonard King. Thank you very much. Thank you to Dr. Leonard King and Dr. Khayda for your comments. I hope that you have a good morning and good night. According to your website, my name is Serhank Hama Saeed. I am the director of the Middle East program with the Ministry of Health. I am here with Dr. Jonathan Dewmoyer, who will be presenting his presentation. He will share his conversations with us. The present speaker is Mr. Moussaed and he is a member of the National Assembly. He is a member of the National Assembly for the establishment of strategic strategies for the development of medicine, for the development of medicine, and for the research that Dr. Jonathan Dewmoyer presented, and usually what we hear is about the value of the complete solution for the completion and the improvement. However, the research and the reports that are produced are based on the quality of the results and the scenario that Dr. Dewmoyer presented in his presentation. I would like to thank Dr. Dewmoyer for the excellent efforts that he has made in Yemen and without further ado, Dr. Dewmoyer. Thank you very much for this presentation. Thank you for presenting this presentation and for Dr. King, the special guest. Thank you very much for UNDP in Yemen. I hope you enjoyed the presentation. Thank you all for watching the presentation. I will now have 15 minutes to give you a quick overview of the report and the background planning. This report is part of the series of three reports that will be produced in cooperation with UNDP in Yemen. The program is the United Nations and I would like to thank the other speakers who are not with me on this Taylor Hanna, who is the director of this third report, and part of the other report, and David Paul, who was also part of this report. And the other speakers who were in it. This is the third report focused on the use of a new HG, which is used to complete the solution to solve the problem on the development in Yemen over time. In the first report, in 2019, we were able to solve the problem to solve the problems and to solve the problems until 2030. And this report was published on the framework and the results that show that solving the problem in Yemen was very big, because a lot of the results for solving the problem are different for solving in Yemen. And so we want to achieve the goal of solving the problem and the problems of the problem at the same time between the two groups, and not at the same time. And the report states that if the human resources are enough to improve the way of solving in Yemen over time, then the human resources will be enough to change the way of solving in Yemen over time. And the only way is to stop solving. And the third report shows the results from 2021 to 2030. And what we saw is that we are drawing the way to talk about the problems in Yemen. And how these problems and the recovery of the problems will affect the results of the problem. The first thing we want to do is to raise the level of awareness in solving the problem in Yemen. And as you have heard from the speakers, this is extremely high. And the second thing we want to show is that the end of solving is the only way to apply to change the way of solving the problem. And in solving the problem, we want to make sure that the international community should focus on providing or providing enough assistance to Yemen that it is possible to achieve the goal of the solution that was to achieve the goal of changing the way of solving. And finally, the complete recovery and the complete recovery for him is two things. First, through the local, national and international actions. And instead of the fact that the government is in isolation, we have to think about the government and the recovery of the different governments as a result of the development of the different organizations. The total number of these governments you have heard from the speakers is 2,021, 377,000. This is the total number of governments. 60% of them are direct governments. So these are the governments because they have not reached the water and food, and health care, and health care systems, and other than the human resources and what is being achieved. So the percentage is increasing over time. In 2021, the new measures for children are showing that every child without a fifth child dies every nine minutes. And that the rate of child mortality is a result of a direct change. It is not death in the battlefield or in the media coverage. Many of these deaths are not given by media coverage. And while the number is increasing, it is increasing rapidly. And the amount of money for this is very huge from where the loss in the local community is 126 billion dollars in 2021. And also in distribution of more than 15 million people to poverty and while the number is increasing, it is increasing rapidly. And the same thing applies to those who are suffering from the loss of their children. And the rate of child mortality is very high for the most vulnerable people in the community. What is the emergency? I will give you some time to explain the emergency and Saudineen will take any questions in the session. We will use the international term which is a number of systems. I can talk about the number of systems in economy, in the city, in the agriculture, in the energy sector. If we look at that from a completely different point of view, we look at the long-term developments, the developments that are happening in Yemen. And of course, this clear map shows that the world is formed by a number of complete systems. When there is no longer a long-term development, we use it to calculate the development and development of that system. But it has to be removed because of the lack of information. So, like these tools that help us to implement these systems, this system gives us a series of scenarios. The scenarios that we have solved here look at different ways in the future for Yemen to be built on a long-term basis. The first scenario is that we start with a scenario on a long-term basis, and it will be on a long-term basis from 2015 to 2030. And secondly, we look at the long-term basis. I mean, how did Yemen develop if there was no longer a long-term basis? Of course, the scenario does not draw a detailed picture, but it does draw a real picture of how the development in other countries is going to be in a long-term basis. And we compare the system with the non-system with the development in the second scenario. The biggest result was that we need to end the system in order to return to the future. And what if we stop the system and the agreement of peace? I mean, a lot of countries are fighting and returning to the system. What if we have to say that we do not have a long-term basis with respect to peace? We are talking about the long-term basis. We are talking about a long-term basis. We will discuss the basic building of the long-term basis, which is a different topic than what is in the short-term basis. Or if you are more interested in the long-term basis, how does it affect the future? And the last scenario is the long-term basis. What if we combine all these elements together? What is the best scenario for the situation in Yemen and how? Or when will we be able to achieve the long-term basis that Yemen used to have before the war? For me, I will show you how we look in comparison to these scenarios. There are many numbers that you have heard from those who used to refer to the difference that is related to the disaster. The child dies every 9 minutes This means that this is a disaster. The child dies every 9 minutes. This does not happen to children in general in Yemen. It is a disaster compared to the past. Here we compare the disaster scenario and the short-term basis. In Yemen, there is a time from 2014 to 2021 in different scenarios. This is how we talk about the consequences of the disaster. The results are shown by the picture on the screen. The total number of deaths in the disaster scenario is on the right side, and on the left side, the total number of the deaths is on the right side, and on the left side, the total number of deaths is on the left side, and on the right side, the total number of deaths is on the right side, and on the left side, the total number of deaths is on the right side, and if this does not happen then we talk about the disaster, and we have a lot of differences between the disaster scenario and the disaster scenario. The total number of deaths is on the left side, and on the right side, and the people who are with us, the people who are with us without a reason, if there is a lack of understanding in the scenario of the disaster in relation to the situation of the disaster. So we will have 440,000 people, and the number of deaths is greater, that is, more than 500,000 deaths. This is talking about the disaster, which we have to do through a strategic follow-up, in the future. And on top of that, we will look at stones or different buildings. We are talking about the quality of the management, such as the fact that it has to do with corruption, and the fact that it is not in human resources, and the clean water, drinking water, education, and the ability of women, and the ability of women in economy to participate in the work of women, and improve their ability to education, and the ability to organize the family, and services, and agricultural facilities. Now, in Yemen, there is a huge amount of food that is used in the country that creates a huge screen in relation to security. This is one of the main reasons that this issue has been affected, from where it is affected, and then the economic development, if we focus more on the effects of financial changes and foreign aid to the others. And now, we are talking about this in more detail, but each of these effects has a different effect on each issue. Here, we will focus once more on the percentage of deaths, and then we will look at the amount of the deaths that are reported. So, the question is, what if we achieve the best results and get better agricultural facilities? Of course, agricultural facilities will have a great impact on the reduction of the poverty rate in 2030, from what is available, from what is worth 100,000 of the deaths. So, what are the effects of agricultural facilities to this great effect? Because the biggest benefit is the ability of women to invest since women have to consider what they want to do, and then to expand their There is a complete agreement, and what we are talking about here is the completion of the policies at different levels. So the international organizations and the international organizations are working together to organize and think in a strategic way about how we are going to continue to affect other parts of the country, and how we are going to implement the agreement and get to the local actions that we are talking about. The policies and the foreign aid that we are talking about are specifically in a suitable way and in the right place. And this is a big influence for people in poverty, poverty, poverty, and economic growth. So what does this do for the example of reducing the number of people who are affected by the financial crisis? So the total number of people affected by the financial crisis is about 700,000. So the total number of people affected by the financial crisis is about 250,000. So the total number of people affected by the financial crisis is about 750,000. And this is logical. So the question is, what is the path of development that Yemen is going through? This shows us the GDP that each person has, and we are talking about human development. So here, this does not include the scenario of development. We are talking about the scenarios of the buildings and the stones. We are talking about the benefits. The green line is going to show you the path of development that Yemen is going to be going through. And the black line is going to show you the complete benefit. And what we see is that Yemen is going to be able to go back to the path of development that Yemen is going to be going through. It is going to happen in the middle of the century. So this is not a simple matter. But there is a strong challenge that we have a moral commitment to reach the strategy of development in order for the future generations of Yemenis to not live in the economic consequences or to have a few consequences of the consequences of this wave. The last slide, which is the recommendations, I think that we all have the responsibility of supporting and supporting each other. I think that this is a very important issue. When we think about the political and economic policies and the economic dynamics, we should think about the number of children that we support because of a direct change of direction. And this is not a children's mistake. The first point is that there should be a constant peace agreement. And this is one of the reasons why we signed up with it. And this is the research. And without that, there will be no real hope to improve development in the country. It should be a complete plan for Yemen. It should be a plan that is not set in different directions from the top to the bottom and in different areas of the first stage. Thank you, Dr. Moyer, for sharing your beautiful presentation. Thank you, Dr. Moyer. Thank you, Dr. Moyer, for sharing your wonderful presentation. Thank you, Dr. Moyer. We have a lot to think about and talk about. And now we will move on to the discussion in Lejna. And we will invite the audience to leave questions through the questions and answers under the USIP page, the live stream, or on Facebook. There are questions and answers. Or you can contact us on Twitter with the hashtag, Pathways for Recovery. The audience will gather your questions and send them to me. And I will make the effort to read as many of them as possible. We have four wonderful speakers. I will give them a list of questions that I will be asking them. First, we have Jihan Abdul Ghaffar, the first speaker for the president. He is a member of the International Bank. He is a member of the International Bank. He is a member of the International Bank. He has worked for more than 20 years on the national, national and international issues to reduce poverty and human poverty. And today, we have the personal characteristics of the International Bank. But we are happy to have it. It is a Yemeni voice. And then we have Mr. Abdul Rahman Al-Aryani. He is a member of the International Bank of Yemen. He is a member of a different role in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Yemen. He was the head of the International Bank of Yemen in the United States of Washington. And Al-Aryani focused on the development of the International Bank of Yemen through the international and international organizations and other organizations. And then we also have Mr. Fira Barbar-Boudin. He is a special teacher in diplomacy and the head of the diplomacy studies in the university. And he is a special diplomat who has more than 30 years in this service focused on the countries of the Arabian Peninsula and Iraq and Yemen. And he also served as, he served as the head of the embassy in Baghdad during the Iraqi-Iranian war. And then imagine the deep knowledge that you give to these talks and actions. And he also served as the head of the embassy in Kuwait during the Iraqi invasion and during the occupation period. And he was also a ambassador to the United States of Yemen for four years. And he knows Yemen and the different countries and the different actions. And he is also the one who knows and knows a lot about it and we are happy to be with him. Who is the head of the embassy in Yemen at UNDP since February 2nd, 2019. He started as the head of the embassy in 2016. His life with UNDP started in 1994. And finally he was the head of the embassy in Rwanda and he also worked in Ukraine and in Sudan and in Uganda, another time. So he knows a lot about Niza'a and Yemen and the negotiations and the development. We will now connect with the questions from the Yemenis and then we will go to the ambassador and we will go to the international view of these issues that they will discuss. So first of all, for you, Jehan, you are the head of the embassy and the head of the embassy in Niza'a. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. I hope that it will end today and not tomorrow, but as you all know, at the end of the day, there will be no winner in this or a fourth in this war. The Yemenis are the biggest losers in this war. But there are many uncertainties, and this leads to many questions. For example, these things always face difficulties in dealing with it. When will this war really end? And what will happen to the end of the war? What will happen to this war? If you don't expect this war to end soon, then the numbers will be modified, especially that the second worst thing that happened in my opinion in this war is, of course, the first one is the loss of the souls, but the second one, for me, is the damage to the social people. We haven't considered anything like this in the past. For me personally, I think that the destruction of the building is an easy side in the process of dealing with it, but it has returned to us that the social sector will be more complicated. And you know, when the war ends, how will the Yemen look like at that moment? And how can we avoid the return to war and the return to war again? I don't have an answer for these questions, but I hope that the war will end soon. So, when you talk to the Yemenis inside the country, or the people, or the refugees, do they see that there is a way where this war will end? I will judge what I said and I will judge what the special forces said that there is no military solution. But how do the Yemenis feel? Can you talk about their opinions? Who do they think is responsible for the end or the end of the war? I think that at this point, everyone who participates in this war is responsible. And as St. Lander King said, there really is no military solution at this point. The only way for this to happen is to have a conversation in the direction of peace, a conversation that will also include all the Yemenis, women, young people, civil society, and others. It should be a full conversation. It should focus on the people's opinions and their expectations. At the end of the war, it ended only during the war. And if you could, I would like to ask you a question before we move on to Abdulrahman. From your experience and from your followers for the development in Yemen as an expert. As for you, what do you believe in the UNDP report? Do you have the opportunity or the opportunity? The report is very sensitive to matters. For me, it gives me a lot of hope and it sends me a message about the importance of participation. We should wait until the end of the war to support the process of cooperation. I think it also provides an answer to why. A question, why do we need cooperation? The scenario of cooperation. I personally think that Yemen has a population that has the opportunity to support women, young people, support the private sector and the small and medium-sized institutions, to increase the production and investment sectors, especially the energy sector. This will put Yemen on the right path for cooperation. I think that the report is right in many ways. For me, the questions that need more cooperation and more details are related to how we will do that. How will we ensure that there is support or a level of support? How will there be an agreement for the shared question or the exchange for all? How will we have a shared economic vision that will give the public the total support and balance between the needs of the people? How will we ensure that the government will feel that the Yemenis have the authority to do so? How will we ensure that we consider the new situation in Yemen? How will we ensure that we continue to develop the work of cooperation on these issues that the public can share with their communities? How will we build on the principles of the local community especially that the war has created a new reality in Yemen? We have a central one. We have a reality where the protectors, especially those who are rich in themselves, are more responsible for their needs. We also have the internal issues. We didn't have that in the past. So there is a new reality on the ground in Yemen. How will we take all this into consideration in Yemen? Thank you very much, Jihan. Thank you for your great points, Abdulrahman. The same question for you. How will Yemenis be able to solve the problem? Thank you very much from Sururi's point of view. And from Sururi's point of view, I would like to be in this wonderful meeting. I would like to start with the UNDP. The university is looking at this wonderful work in the three reports. It is really an addition to the group of books that are listed in the Niza cases. When... In two ways. I would like to consider this report, especially in Yemen, and we will go to it for the information and the three reports with data, analysis, and data drawings, and numbers to express in a good way the negative influence of the war in general, especially in Yemen specifically. The war in Yemen is not a new war. It continues for seven years. We can't go back to the work of Adam al-Isikrar to the Arab Spring. And when we deal with such reports, we have to understand what happens. The reason I read it is to understand what happens. What are you trying to achieve with these reports? And in my opinion, from what you understood from the three reports, is that the war has been going on for tens of years, for hundreds of months, or for years. And it has been going on for seven years. So it was a negative influence, really. I don't think we have to understand it in terms of this situation in Yemen. Yemenis are suffering, but the screen is now on the outside, because these screens are like the whole area. The issue now is not related to Yemen only. There is a reason why the biggest war, the worst consequences of this war. And there is a way, and as the reports said, there is a turning point. But for me, it is trying to reach us the reports that every time we delay the recovery of the enemy operations, each of us becomes bigger and bigger. Yemenis, in general, don't need to read the reports to understand what they face. They consider it in their daily lives. But sometimes, there is a turning point. Or a turning point. I am a victim of that. Sometimes I say, I know Yemenis, but there are things I don't know. Like Pandora's box, there are effects of the war. We don't fully understand it, and we don't understand it, except after tens of years. When we look at the reports and say, this was the result of the war. Especially when it comes to social contact. But I am a victim, because we have to return to good things in our lives. There are some things that didn't happen in the right way. For example, the demolition of the whole city, as we saw in Syria and Iraq, and the effect of the economy, which we expected. There is the ability to supply, the ability to prevent Yemenis and the Yemeni economy, and the Yemeni society. And I think, as you can see here, I think that the international development organizations have to build on the Yemeni rich social capital. As Shehan mentioned, we have a very rich land. The youth, the youth organizations, the society organizations, and also the government organizations that are able to implement a sustainable project to give the right to some kind of stability for some aspects of the life of Yemenis and the difficulties they face during this complicated war. And I think if you have any questions, I will stop here. Thank you very much. Thank you, Abdul Rahman. You answered the following question, which will be from your experience and from your follow-up around the development in Yemen. What is your response to UNDP's report on the concerns of the recovery, and the benefits of the recovery? You have made it to the point, not to mention it, but if there is anything you would like to add, then the word is yours. We, Yemenis, don't live on the island alone. We are in a world of science, and we have seen the impact of the war on the neighboring countries. And one of the very important things is that we see and notice what happened in Afghanistan. The most famous song I knew before I became president is the news about the building of the nation, and about the work, about giving the right to the country facing challenges. We have seen what happened, and this has nothing to do with its performance, but the state is in a very difficult situation. There was a study by Dr. Freeman, and he is a very well-known physicist. He said that physics is the source of our ignorance, and this means that it is difficult for us to understand physics, and we have also seen the social situation, especially when we want to look at the past. But what I say is that we have to end the worst part of this war, so that we have a sustainable project, with a sustainable meaning. We can't start with a sustainable project without having a certain kind of stability on the earth. And maybe some of the UNDP members may be able to talk about the problems they face, and the difficulties that they face on the earth. I want to remind the viewers that there are a number of questions to be answered, and you can ask questions in the live stream on the internet page, and we also post them on Facebook, and on Twitter using hashtag path for recovery. We have now moved on to the international view, and I would like to thank the ambassador to the United Arab Emirates for the invitation to the Linder King meeting, because it has become a law and it has not become a terrorist group, and the Iranian, Iraq and all these things have given us hope that there will be a new energy, a new diplomatic energy, and less economic development will be affected by Yemen. In the future, we will see more fighting in Yemen and attacks on the Emirates. Why did these things happen? Why did things happen in this direction? More violence instead of more terrorism? Is this because of the international or international players? Or did we not see our efforts? That's a good question. I would like to thank the USIP for organizing these events, and I am very happy and I feel like it is clear that we are talking about what they are doing in Yemen, and we have students from Yemen, and scientists from Yemen, or people who are experts in Yemen. I would like to thank Jonathan and UNDP, Jonathan and the team, not just on the series of three reports that I think we should read all of them to try to work on Yemen. But especially for the last report, it does lay out a way for us to go forward, not in a way that is not easy, and not cheap or something that can be used, but it has a way that can be built on data and focused on people and strategy as well. It understands or gives us that there is importance in local leadership, and that we are based on official institutions, human rights and respect, and I am sure that this is not about the budget, but essentially about the report. It is about everything we give to our internet community, and it is about everything we give to our internet community. We are a national community, and I know that this report started before it was published in Afghanistan, but this is the exchange and this is the treatment for the lessons that we had to learn from Afghanistan. I hope that many politicians will read this report, and this also leads to an important lesson, and this also leads to your question, and it is that if the international community does not participate in a smart way, and in a big way, and in a short way, in the work of cooperation in Yemen, then the situation in Yemen will be reversed, or it will not be completely out of poverty and poverty, and that again, the UNDP, either we go with that in a right way, or we make a mistake, and we do it again and again, and as we heard from Jihad, we will not be able to win any side and the people of Yemen will continue to lose. Why did we go from this great hope to a state like this, to a state that seems to be worse than that? I think part of it, I think part of it will be within the active parties or the players in Yemen, but also the players or the active parties in the economy. If there is something to say, a simple civil war, this is not the same, maybe it started as a civil war, but it became an economic war, and when it became an economic war, it increased the level of war, and the length of war, and the thickness of war. And also, there is no balance, I know it's very friendly to the military, not in the military, but especially the Saudi army and the Emirati, for me, to be honest, Sanad and the government they are from the eastern government, but they do not enjoy much of the eastern government, and they do not have the ability to enter the country. And actually, there is a lot of corruption in the size of the country, but the Houthis, they are the players of the original players, of the people, and they used the support of Iran for them, for sure, but they do not rely on Iran as the other parties rely on the Saudi and the Emiratis, so there is a huge balance Why did they agree? I think that, in my opinion, Houthis really believed that they could win military victory. They were controlling most of the north and most of the south, and they saw that the anti-terrorism forces because they had no one and they made it possible, and by doing that, it did change the calculation. And this changed the calculations. I think that there is also a good evidence that the Iranians were giving us the resources to be able to get to Riyadh and Abu Dhabi. Of course, this through the limits was easy, but it was a different technology. What did the Iranians have to control through these weapons? I'm a diplomat, I'm not in any idea. I don't know, I don't know what's going on in Kunhi, and Bali, and Tehran. It has changed the responsibility to get to the end. For a long time, many of our viewers said that if we were able to ask the Saudis to stop them and to reduce their military support, and that the Yemenis will be able to gather with them and to have them in control of the Yemenis and the results of the Yemenis. I think that in this situation, the matter has moved to Tehran and Riyadh is more than the situation before the war. I don't think that the international community has played with it for a long time. I don't think that the Lander King and the Fas Mosque in Riyadh and Abu Dhabi have been in any other place. I don't think that the international community has been in any other place. But the international community is more than the international community. Where is the international community that has started? I think that the international community has to be able to use the international strategy to complete as Dr Muir and his team from UNDP have said. Unless if we have peace or if we stop the war in Basaqa, we will go back to this and talk about the same five years after the war. I think that the international community has to focus on the day of the war and not specifically on the end of the war. Thank you, Ambassador. You answered a number of questions in your comments. Ambassador, do you think that the international community and why is it important to reach this role? I will start with you. I will ask all of you if you have heard about some of the ideas and policies. After that I will go to you and say that you are working on the land in Yemen and you know that you are working on the land in Yemen and that you know that you know that you know that we have been suffering over the past 5 years now of people suffering of the people suffering of the people suffering of the people I would like to thank Sir Heng for the question and thank you. Thank you Sir Heng for the question and thank you for the honor. Thank you Sir Heng for the question and thank you for the honor. Thank you Sir Heng for the question and thank you. Thank you Sir Heng for the question and thank you. Thank you Sir Heng for the question and thank you. Thank you Sir Heng for the question. Thank you Sir Heng. Thank you Sir Heng. Thank you Sir Heng. Thank you Sir Heng. Thank you Sir Heng. Thank you Sir Heng. Thank you Sir Heng. Thank you Sir Heng. Thank you Sir Heng. Thank you Sir Heng. Thank you Sir Heng. Thank you Sir Heng. Thank you Sir Heng. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. 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