Yemen calls for militias to be listed as terror group

Houthi militias have been accused of recruiting over 1,000 children to fight alongside them in Yemen. (Reuters)
Updated 16 April 2017
Follow

Yemen calls for militias to be listed as terror group

PARIS/ADEN: Yemen’s Deputy Human Rights Minister Mohammed Askar has called on the international community to include Houthi militias and forces loyal to ousted President Ali Abdullah Saleh on the list of terrorist groups.
Askar also called for the immediate implementation of UN resolutions on Yemen, in particular resolution 2216.
“The coup has led to a serious and unprecedented deterioration of the humanitarian situation,” he said, adding that targeting civilians and extrajudicial killings are flagrant violations of international humanitarian law.
He urged international organizations to work professionally, accurately and clearly to hold accountable perpetrators of human rights violations in Yemen, and to take necessary measures to deter them.
These organizations’ soft approach toward militia abuses “encourages them to commit more violations and crimes, and doesn’t constitute any deterrent for those militias.”
Since the Houthi coup, almost 11,000 Yemenis have been killed by the militias, including 1,002 children and 649 women, and more than 27,000 people have been injured, Askar said.
Houthi mines have killed and injured more than 673 Yemenis, and cause causalities on a daily basis, he added.
Since the coup, the militias have kidnapped and arrested nearly 17,000 people. Individuals released from Houthi prisons are suffering from severe mental and physical health issues, he said.
Houthi militias have recruited more than 1,000 children, and have forced women to fight for them, Askar added.
Meanwhile, Yemeni scholars and activists have condemned violations against mosques in Yemen by the Houthi and Saleh militias.
The scholars said the violations reflect the militias’ enmity toward the Islamic faith and the role played by mosques.
Scholar Abdul Raqib Al-Rasas said the militias target mosques in provinces under their control because mosques stand firmly against the Houthi project. He stressed “the need to show the position and sanctity of the mosque, and its role in promoting and educating people.”

Ahmed Al-Qahtani, a member of the Yemeni-American Alliance in New York, said the reason for the violation of mosques is to terrorize people.
“Their enmity to the imams of the mosques, the guardians of the Qur’an and people of knowledge is because they know that the imams of mosques and guardians of the Qur’an will not accept their sectarian project and will strongly challenge it,” Al-Qahtani said.
Sheikh Abdul Wahid Al-Rajhi said Houthi militias are a terrorist group characterized by ignorance and impudence. “They violate mosques to send a message to the enemies of the nation that ‘we are with you in beating Islam’,” he said.
“They blow up a mosque because it is the home of influence in society. Their faith does not respect or believe in mosques. They want Yemen to become an Iranian province.”
Arafat Hamran, chairman of the Yemeni human rights watchdog Rassd, said: “The Houthis want an ignorant society in order to implant their superstitious beliefs, so they kill worshipers and imams of mosques, scholars and guardians of the Qur’an.”
He added that Yemenis are a people of faith and wisdom, and “these actions are beyond our faith, morals and values. The militias don’t build a state but seek havoc.”
He urged Yemenis to be attentive to the danger of the Houthis because they are a tool of Iran, which destroys any country it intervenes in and divides its people into sects.


Israel expands Lebanon strikes, killing 11

Updated 14 sec ago
Follow

Israel expands Lebanon strikes, killing 11

  • Israel expanded its air strikes in Lebanon on Wednesday, targeting the area around the presidential palace near Beirut and other areas south of the capital
BEIRUT: Israel expanded its air strikes in Lebanon on Wednesday, targeting the area around the presidential palace near Beirut and other areas south of the capital as well as strongholds of the Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah, killing at least 11 people.
Lebanon was drawn into the Middle East war on Monday when Hezbollah attacked Israel in response to the killing of Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei during US-Israeli strikes over the weekend.
An air strike hit a hotel in Hazmieh on Wednesday, the first reported Israeli attack on the predominantly Christian area in Beirut’s suburbs near the presidential palace and several embassies.
Some rooms were gutted in the strike, while wounded people received treatment in the lobby, AFP images showed.
People also fled through debris carrying suitcases past the Comfort Hotel’s sign, which had fallen broken to the ground. It was not possible to determine who was targeted in the attack.
The southern suburbs of Beirut, a Hezbollah stronghold, were targeted again on Wednesday morning, following an evacuation order from Israel’s military.
Smoke rose over the densely populated area, where some residents fled when the violence erupted.
In Aramoun and Saadiyat south of Beirut — two towns outside Hezbollah’s traditional strongholds — the health ministry said Israeli strikes killed six people and wounded eight others. It cautioned that this was a “preliminary toll.”
AFP footage from Aramoun showed damaged cars and rescue workers carrying a wounded person on a stretcher.
Strikes also targeted a four-story building in the city of Baalbek, in Lebanon’s east far from the border where Hezbollah also has a strong presence.
Five people were killed, 15 were wounded and three remain missing, Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency reported.
One side of the building collapsed. AFP correspondents saw rescue workers searching through the rubble for survivors.

- Ground incursion -

The Israeli military called on people to “immediately” leave 13 towns and villages in southern Lebanon on Wednesday morning ahead of strikes against Hezbollah, the military’s Arabic-language spokesman Avichay Adraee said on X.
A similar evacuation warning had earlier been issued for 16 other southern towns and villages.
Hezbollah carried out a series of strikes against Israel on Tuesday, claiming to have targeted sites including the northern Haifa naval base in retaliation for Israeli strikes in southern Beirut.
Since Monday, Israeli strikes have killed at least 50 people and wounded 335 in Lebanon, the health ministry said before the overnight strikes.
World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said three paramedics were killed and six injured “while recovering people injured by explosions” in Lebanon’s southern Tyre district.
“Warring parties must abide by international humanitarian law and protect health workers, facilities and patients,” he said on X.
Lebanese authorities on Monday recorded the displacement of more than 58,000 people from areas targeted by strikes.
The Israeli military has said it will continue to strike Hezbollah until the Lebanese group disarms.
Israeli forces also launched a ground incursion on Tuesday, advancing into a border area in southern Lebanon, a Lebanese army source told AFP.