Houthi-controlled court sentences 16 Yemenis to death, 13 others to prison

Yemeni fighters, loyal to the Shiite Houthi movement, secure a rally in the capital Sanaa. (AFP/File)
Short Url
Updated 19 December 2022
Follow

Houthi-controlled court sentences 16 Yemenis to death, 13 others to prison

  • Suspects condemned to death on grounds of working with Coalition to Restore Legitimacy
  • Acts of mass killing expose militia's criminal attitude, says top Justice Ministry official

AL-MUKALLA: A Sanaa-based attorney said that a Houthi-run court has condemned 16 Yemenis to death on grounds of working with the Coalition to Restore Legitimacy in Yemen and the militia’s Yemeni opponents.

Abdul Majeed Sabra, a Yemeni lawyer who defends abductees held in Houthi prisons, said that the Specialized Criminal Court of First Instance has commuted the death sentences of 16 Yemenis, including seven held by the Houthis, and sentenced 13 others to prison terms of varying lengths after convicting them of communicating with the coalition and sending the locations of military facilities and leaders.

All 29 people hail from Saada, the Houthi movement’s heartland.

The same group of individuals was placed on trial for the first time in October, when a Houthi court accused them of communicating with the coalition and Yemeni governments between January 2014 and December 2020.

Sabra told Arab News that the ruling is the primary one and that he filed an appeal against it, adding that the convicts being detained by the Houthis are civilians, including teachers and farmers.

“The trial and appeal will go before the same court, and if it sustains the judgment, we will file an appeal with the Supreme Court,” he said.

A Yemeni government official and other activists have branded the charges as “malicious” and intended as retaliation against Yemenis who oppose the militia and the confiscation of their property in Houthi-controlled regions.

Faisal Al-Majidi, undersecretary of the Yemeni Ministry of Justice, accused the Houthis of using the court system to punish Yemeni government supporters and to legitimize rampant looting of the property of militia opponents.

“The court is used as a glove to settle rivalries with individuals who oppose the ideology of the Houthi militia, and their money is taken on the pretext of communicating with the aggressors,” Al-Majidi told Arab News.

“These acts of mass killing expose the Houthi group's criminal attitude against the Saada population.”

Since the first day of their military coup against the Yemeni government in late 2014, the Houthis have abducted hundreds of Yemenis, severely tortured them in jail, and charged them with collaborating with the Yemeni government and the coalition.

A large number of politicians, including the former president, top government officials, activists, journalists, and military and security personnel were also punished in absentia by the Houthis, who took their houses and property in Sanaa and the other places they control.

The province of Saada in Yemen’s north has been home to the Houthi militia for almost two decades, and it has been the site of six wars between the Yemeni government and the Houthis since 2004, when the Houthis initiated a military insurrection against the government.

Separately, the UN’s International Organization for Migration reported that 9,849 Yemeni families (59,094 individuals) had been displaced from their homes in war-torn provinces from Jan. 1 to Dec. 10, 2022, despite the significant cessation of hostilities over the past eight months as a result of the UN-brokered ceasefire.

Eighty percent of the displaced individuals in Marib, Lahj, Dhale and other Yemeni cities were forced from their homes owing to safety concerns, while 20 percent left for economic reasons, according to the organization.

More than 2 million people who have escaped Houthi repression and conflict in their homes reside in camps and buildings in the government-controlled city of Marib, which has the highest concentration of displaced persons in Yemen.


Sudan’s RSF targeted civilians with disabilities in El-Fasher: HRW

Updated 3 sec ago
Follow

Sudan’s RSF targeted civilians with disabilities in El-Fasher: HRW

KHARTOUM: Sudanese paramilitary forces killed, abused and targeted people with disabilities during and after their takeover of El-Fasher, Human Rights Watch said Wednesday, calling it the first time it had documented abuse of “this type and scale.”
The Rapid Support Forces, which have been fighting Sudan’s regular army since April 2023, captured the military’s last stronghold in western Darfur in October after an 18-month siege.
Reports later emerged of mass killings, abductions, rape and widespread looting.
Last week, the UN’s independent fact-finding mission on Sudan said the assault on El-Fasher bore “the hallmarks of genocide.”
“Human Rights Watch has documented abuses against people with disabilities in armed conflict around the world for over a decade,” said Emina Cerimovic, the group’s associate disability rights director.
“But this is the first time we have documented this type and scale of targeted abuse.”
HRW interviewed 22 survivors and witnesses from El-Fasher and found that RSF fighters singled out civilians with disabilities as they tried to flee.
“The Rapid Support Forces treated people with disabilities as suspects, burdens or expendable,” Cerimovic said.
She added that fighters accused amputees of being injured soldiers and “summarily executed them,” while others were mocked as “insane” or “not being a complete person.”
A 29-year-old nurse said fighters executed a young man with Down syndrome whose sister had carried him on her back.
“After killing her brother, they tied her hands, covered her face and took her away,” said the nurse.
The nurse also described fighters ordering a woman carrying a blind teenage boy on her back to put him down.
“She said ‘he cannot see’,” the nurse said. “They immediately shot him in the head.”
Another witness said he saw fighters kill “more than 10 people,” most with physical disabilities.
Others were beaten, detained for ransom or stripped of essential devices such as wheelchairs and hearing aids, leaving many unable to escape, HRW said.
Conditions in displacement camps also remain dire, with “bathrooms and other facilities... inaccessible” to people with disabilities, witnesses told HRW.
On Tuesday, the UN Security Council sanctioned four RSF commanders over atrocities in El-Fasher.
The wider conflict has killed tens of thousands of people, displaced 11 million and triggered one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.