International report: Sana'a is the third worst city in the world

English - Wednesday 18 August 2021 الساعة 06:19 pm
Sana'a, NewsYemen, Exclusive:

 Sana'a Governorate, which is under the control of the terrorist Irloo militia, Iran's arm in Yemen, topped the list of the third worst-living cities in the world.

According to the Spanish magazine "muynegociosyeconomia", Sanaa, which is under Houthi control, came in third place after the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, and the city of Bangui in the Central African Republic, followed by Port-au-Prince in Haiti, and Khartoum in fifth.

The Moi index is based on accurate data, and a separate list on personal safety, which focuses on city stability, crime levels, law enforcement, and restrictions on personal freedom, security and safety.

Sanaa under Iranian rule

 The Houthi coup militia continues a series of violations, levies, sectarianism, kidnappings and reprehensible crimes over the years of the war. NewsYemen refutes the most important violations of the militias' rule, which made Sanaa classified as the worst livable city in the world.

collections

 In contrast to the levies imposed by the militias on merchants from the smallest to the largest, sectarian and religious occasions are used to mobilize and support the fighting fronts, by imposing huge financial levies on merchants and citizens, at a time when the majority of the population is under the threat of starvation, as a result of the Houthis taking over the salaries of state employees, more than 7 years ago and restricting private business owners.

Poverty reigns supreme

 With the interruption of salaries since the coup of the Houthi militia, the living conditions of citizens have worsened, the unemployment rate has risen, and hundreds of thousands have lost their jobs.  

Unemployment rises and hundreds of thousands of people lose their jobs.  Retirees suddenly found themselves without salaries after the Houthi group took control of the pension funds, and Iran's arms took control of economic institutions, especially revenue ones, such as the "oil company", "Kamaran company", "Yemen Mobile" company, and "the economic institution", and the Public Corporation for Telecommunications, the General Corporation for Postal and Postal Savings, the Tax Authority, the Customs Authority, and the Capital Municipality’s revenues, in return none of these funds are spent on citizens.

Dismissal of a thousand employees

 The Supreme Police Council, which is run by the militias, dismissed (904) officers from the Ministry of the Interior, which is run by the Houthi leader and the uncle of the militia leader Abdul Karim al-Houthi.  Political and security sources had previously described to NewsYemen the contents of the militia leader's speech about purifying state institutions from whom he claimed to be intruding, as evidence of the tendencies of these militias to exclude national cadres and replace them with cadres and elements affiliated with them.

education investment

 The Houthi militia tended to invest in education by establishing private schools, which amounted to more than 550 private schools, according to official statistics, and the cost of a student in some of these schools reaches 200,000 riyals as an average.  As for the middle school, it exceeds 290,000 riyals in the Arabic section, while in the secondary stage it reaches more than 380,000 riyals.

sectarianism and terrorism

 Under the claims of memorizing the Qur’an, the Houthi militia is luring an entire generation of “young men” to fill it with sectarian and regional ideas bearing the nature of the Iranian project targeting the region.

In a previous statistic, the number of those who joined the summer centers reached 620 thousand, an increase of 220 thousand from what was expected.

The Houthi militia forces government schools to set up theaters and radio stations around the martyr, the martyr’s day, and sectarian events that are more intense than the private ones, and the sectarian curriculum and its focus, while the private ones are still the ones who print their curriculum, so that a large segment of families turn to these schools despite the huge sums that pay the fees.

Children's Holocaust Recruitment

 During the first ten months of 2020, ninety-three children were killed in the capital, and two hundred and thirty-three children were killed in the same period in Sana'a.  

The ages of the children range from 12 to 17 years.  

Where 49 leaders were involved in the ranks of the Iranian arm by sending them to the battlefronts in the ranks of the Houthi militia.

death camps

 Iran’s arm was able to legitimize many of its crimes, as many detainees were subjected to lengthy investigations, torture to the point of death, and enforced disappearance in secret prisons before they ended up in the central prison. 

The central prison was used as a destination for all inmates with criminal cases; according to the submitted reports, this prompted the militia to fabricate charges of trafficking in contraband, including hashish and narcotics, as well as charges of prostitution, to all opponents who were arrested, especially women.

Spying and sifting information and revenue

 With the complicity of the Brotherhood’s legitimate government, the Houthi militia is benefiting from enormous financial resources from the telecommunications sector, as it supplied its coffers during the period from 2014 to 2018, with 3 billion and 122 million dollars, including one billion and 82 million dollars under tax and zakat, and two billion and thirty-nine million seven hundred and twenty-three  A thousand dollars, and the survival of the communications and Internet sector, under the control of the Houthi militia, represents a major interest for it. In addition to the huge financial revenues, the Houthis are exploiting this sector from a security and military point of view.

Al Qaeda's approach

 The head of the Yemeni Singers Club, Sharaf al-Qaedi, revealed earlier this August that many of his colleagues had been arrested, detained, kidnapped, and had musical instruments confiscated, in what can be called a systematic war waged by the Houthi militia against art and artists since 2015.

According to the United Nations, Yemen is suffering from the worst humanitarian crisis in the world, with about 8 million people on the brink of famine, in addition to the spread of diseases and epidemics, and the severe economic collapse that the country is facing as a result of the war that has been going on for nearly seven years.