Houthis turning to university youth to compensate human losses
The Iran-backed Houthi militia tries to compensate the human losses it sustained in the past months by imposing a new type of obligatory recruitment to university youths, especially in the areas it controls.
Militia representatives delivered a series of lectures at a
number of universities and schools recently to lure students and pupils into
its ranks.
According to some news outlets, the Houthi militia
squanders huge amounts of money on these events, despite warnings by the United
Nations against growing hunger across Yemen.
The United Nations even warned against the death of some
Yemenis in cases action was not taken to improve living conditions throughout
the country.
Sources within the militia said the militia command insists
to deliver lectures at the schools and the universities with a sectarian tone.
Houthi Minister of Education Hussein Hazeb asked the
students to join the militia as soon as possible.
He conceded the human losses of the militia by saying there
are new photos of killed Houthi fighters on the walls in Sana'a every day.
The Houthi militia marks what it calls the "Day of the
Martyr" in the cities it controls, with the aim of mobilizing ordinary
people and encouraging them to join its ranks.
On January 4, the staff of the University of Sciences and
Technology was forced to attend an event organized by the Houthis that included
a visit to the graves of Houthi fighters killed in the battles in the past
months.
The militia had previously overrun the university, the
largest in Yemen. It appointed a man loyal to it as a president of the
university. The militia also put the former president of the university in
jail.



