Houthis use mosques in Yemen to recruit new militants
The terrorist Houthi militia has transformed most of the
mosques in the Yemeni capital, Sanaa, from places of worship into places to
mobilize and recruit new armed elements for the Iranian-backed group.
Yemeni news website Almashhad reported on Sunday, September
6 that the Houthi terrorist militia delivered a number of pre-prepared sermons
from emergency vehicles on Friday, September 4 in Dhamar, Sanaa and a number of
areas under the militia’s control.
The preachers spoke about the urgent need to recruit youth,
claiming that whoever refrains from fighting amid the ranks of the militia is a
mercenary.
Worshipers said that Houthi gunmen cordoned off and raided a
mosque in a neighborhood in the center of Sanaa after its imam refused to
deliver a sectarian sermon that the militia attempted to spread by force.
For his part, Yemeni Endowments and Guidance Minister Ahmed
Attia called on Saturday, September 5 for imams, preachers, religious guides
and media to unify the Friday sermons.
In a circular distributed to the endowment offices and
mosque preachers in Yemen’s governorates, the minister pointed out the
importance of getting rid of the Houthi militia.
He stressed the need to call citizens from all segments to
line up behind the country's legitimate ruler, President Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi
and the Yemeni National Army.
Attia also called for exposing the Houthi and Iranian
conspiracy against Yemen, clarifying the Houthi’s crimes against the Yemeni
people and the damage cause on the ideological, social and economic levels.
In August 2020, the Endowments Ministry revealed statistics
about the number of mosques targeted by the Houthis since their coup in late
2014 until the end of 2019. The militia has targeted approximately 750 mosques
throughout Yemen’s governorates.
The Houthis have bombed and looted mosques and Quran schools,
even turning them into weapons storages or khat dens.
The Endowments Ministry also condemned the targeting of the
Special Security Forces mosque in Marib governorate with a ballistic missile at
the time of the Friday dawn prayer, which resulted in the death and injury of
more than 20 soldiers performing the prayers.
The ministry added that the Houthis’ criminal acts targeting
places of worship is inconsistent with the true Islamic religion and divine
laws that sanctify places of worship and contradicts humanitarian and moral
principles.
It emphasized that targeting innocent people and places of
worship amounts to terrorism that cannot be tolerated, noting that the Houthis
do not hesitate to shed blood, abolish taboos or violate the sanctity of
mosques. Rather, the militia’s activities represent a satanic creed that has
been reproduced from the chaos spread by Iran in the region.



