Thousands of Yemenis on Friday took to the streets of the capital Sanaa, showing solidarity with Palestinians and denouncing Israeli airstrikes on Yemen.
In Al-Sabeen Square, participants waved Palestinian-Yemeni flags and chanted slogans against the United States and Israel, following a series of airstrikes against ports and energy infrastructure in Sanaa and Hodeidah.
Protesters condemned these airstrikes, saying their targets are civilians and reflect Israel's approach of attacking daily life. They also said Israel has failed to stop Yemen's support for Gaza.
"The airstrikes and attacks on the Yemeni Republic and its resources and sovereignty can in no way deter the Yemeni people from standing with and providing religious and ethnic support in solidarity with the Palestinian people," said Ridwan Al-Haimi, a protester.
"We came out today to condemn the aggressive strikes on the Yemeni people, as well as the Israeli aggression against Syria, Palestine, and all the resistance fighters in Arab and Islamic countries," said Zaid Al-Bastout, another protester.
Yemen's Houthi movement, whom Israel claims will change their stance on Gaza, has not shifted its position. They described the Israeli attacks on power stations in southern and northern Sanaa and the Salif district in Hodeidah, which killed at least nine people, as acts of terrorism. They affirmed their continued support for Gaza.
"Surprises are being prepared to target the depths of the Israeli enemy’s territory. We will not stay silent against any attack and will respond to strikes with even bigger strikes. The message was delivered clearly; while Sanaa was being bombed, we simultaneously targeted the Ministry of Defense in Tel Aviv," said Zaid Al-Gharsi, the head of the media and cultural affairs department of Yemen's presidential office.
On Friday, Yahya Saree, the military spokesman for the Houthi movement announced a joint military operation by Yemen and Iraq targeting southern Israel with several drones, which he said successfully hit their targets.
"The continued crimes committed against our brothers in Gaza will only lead to more strikes through missile power and drone air force," he said.
Yemenis protest in solidarity with Palestinians
Hengqin Island, located just across China's Macao Special Administrative Region (SAR), has undergone tremendous changes over the past few decades, bringing enormous development opportunities to young people in Macao and the mainland, said Leong Ka-seng, a 32-year-old entrepreneur from Macao.
Born and raised in Macao, Leong chose to work and start a business in Hengqin nine years ago. Today, he runs two restaurants and a decoration company in Hengqin. At the age of 32, he has become an experienced entrepreneur with both failures and successes.
"I came to Hengqin for development in 2015, and officially moved there to live and start a business in 2018. Macao is where I grew up and where I have taken root, but I think Hengqin may be the place where I can blossom and yield fruit," Leong said.
Hengqin is located at the southern end of Zhuhai, south China's Guangdong Province, and is adjacent to Macao by bridge and sea. To travel between Macao and Hengqin, Leong needs to go through the Hengqin Port.
"In the past, the Dahengqin Mountain was over there, and the Xiaohengqin Mountain was on the other side, with a vast ocean in between. The land we see may have been sea at the time. After the West Dike and the East Dike near Macao were built, land reclamation work began when there was not so much water area. This is the place known as the central sulcus," Leong introduced when standing on a bridge in Hengqin.
Leong's connection with Hengqin goes beyond his age as the story involves three generations of his family. In the 1970s, then Zhuhai County launched a reclamation project. In about ten years, tens of thousands of youths in Guangdong's Shunde City went to Hengqin for work, and that was when Leong's grandfather came to Hengqin.
"Decades ago, my grandfather saw the same sky, the same sea, and the same two mountains as I do. Now, I can also see the high-rise buildings. In just a few decades, Hengqin has undergone tremendous changes," Leong said.
In April 2015, the Zhuhai Hengqin New Area of the China (Guangdong) Pilot Free Trade Zone was officially launched. At that time, Leong was about to graduate from university. At a sharing session with deputies of the Macao SAR to the National People's Congress (NPC) and representatives of the Hengqin New Area, he learned about the planning and future development of Hengqin and came up with the idea of going there for development.
"In Macao, I might have chosen a few fixed directions, such as working in a bank, a government department, or a financial institution. But in Hengqin, I don't know what industry I will be in. I think I can be brave and give it a try, and there may be some unexpected results," he said.
Leong said there are both opportunities and uncertainties in Hengqin, but he saw with his own eyes the positive development of the area.
"My real feeling at that time was a mixture of confusion and hope. I didn't know how the future would be, but I went to Hengqin every day indeed, 365 days a year, starting from 2015, so it has been more than 3,000 days. I see with my eyes the changes every day and every year, which makes me feel that this place is really developing, not stagnant, but is always developing. It may slow down sometimes, but it is indeed moving forward," Leong said.
Hengqin undergoes tremendous changes over past decades: Macao entrepreneur