Qatar offering support to Houthis in Yemen
The regime in Qatar does everything possible to rescue its allies from their financial crises.
The same allies help
Doha advance its terrorist agenda in the region.
The Iran-backed
Houthi militia was the latest to receive support from Qatar.
Yemeni female
activist, Hayat al-Bidani, who was forced to leave Qatar recently at the
request of the Houthi militia and travelled to Djibouti with her son, spoke
about Qatari support to the Iran-backed militia.
She wrote on Twitter
on August 15 that she had received death threats and that she got divorce after
undergoing physical and psychological abuse at the hands of her husband.
Al-Bidani noted that
Qatari authorities had forced her to leave Qatar for Djibouti.
Yemeni Information
Minister Muammar al-Eriani backed this version of al-Bidani's story.
He called on Doha to
stop cooperating with the Houthis, especially when it comes to crimes that
violate international law and United Nations Security Council resolutions.
Al-Eriani said the
government in Doha overlooks the suffering ordinary Yemenis sustain because of
the Houthi coup on legitimacy in Yemen.
On August 16, the
Qatari Foreign Ministry issued a statement in which it rejected the accusations
of the Yemeni minister of information.
These accusations, it
said, are baseless.
However, al-Bidani
said asserted that she was forced to leave Qatar and that her life was in
danger in the Gulf state.
Qatari
support
Doha offers financial
and military support to the Houthis. This support increased after the United
States imposed sanctions on Iran in May 2018.
The sanctions had
caused the Iranian economy to collapse. They made Iran's mullahs to incapable
of giving money to their militias in the region.
In July this year,
Yemeni Prime Minister Mo'ein Abdel Malek called on Qatar to stop supporting the
Houthis.
Qatar National Bank
resumed its work in Yemeni capital Sana'a in 2019. The bank carried out dubious
transactions for the sake of the Houthi militia.




