Houthi monopoly: Militia controls selling medicine to foreign organizations

Similar to what the Houthis did in controlling the trade of oil derivatives and domestic gas, as well as monopolizing work in the relief sector by closing all organizations that existed and were not affiliated with them and then creating alternative organizations, the militia has included the pharmaceutical sector in the lists of commodities whose trade is monopolized.
The Iranian-backed terrorist militia continues its criminal
operations against civilians, as it has forced foreign organizations operating in
Yemen, which are active in providing drug assistance, to buy medicine from
specific drug companies and agencies that the Houthis recently established to
replace local drug companies.
Local news site NewsYemen quoted a source in the Save the
Children organization as saying that the Houthi militia forced Save the
Children and other foreign organizations to buy medicine from ten drug
companies that were recently established by the militia.
The source added that the militia has diverted dozens of
drug companies that are not affiliated with them from selling medicine to
organizations by stopping the renewal of licenses for them, explaining that
when organizations request the supply of medicines, they require that drug
companies and agencies have a valid permit from the official authorities.
According to media reports, the Houthi militia took
administrative measures that enabled it to monopolize the drug trade,
especially with humanitarian organizations operating in the country that work
in the field of providing hospitals with medicines.
It is reported that the Houthi militia exploited its control
over the Supreme Medicines Authority, refused to renew the licenses of
operating companies and agencies, granted new licenses to companies and
agencies owned by Houthi leaders, and adopted new and alternative varieties of
medicines for the benefit of these agencies.
Earlier, the terrorist militia monopolized the trade of
fuel, including cooking gas, and doubled its prices. It also monopolized the
provision of relief work services to international organizations operating in
their areas of control, while appointments to public positions were restricted
to those belonging to the same lineage as Houthi leaders.
Militia leaders are the only ones able to work in this
sector, as reports revealed that when any international organization submits a
request to import shipments of medicines, the Houthis, through their Council
for Humanitarian Affairs, require that the applicant companies obtain a recent
renewal of work permits, and therefore these organizations can only turn to the
companies established by the militia. This also comes after the militia
previously succeeded in monopolizing the trade of oil derivatives through the
establishment of new companies to import and market fuel, and its refusal to
renew work licenses for companies that existed before the coup.
According to reports, Houthi leaders, including spokesman
Mohammed Abdul-Salam, financial official Saleh al-Shaer, Ali Nasir Qarsha and
Ahmed Dughsan, own the most important oil derivative import companies,
monopolize the trade of this commodity, control its prices, and run a black
market that extends into all areas of Houthi control.
Statistics from the Supreme Medicines Authority indicate
that the drug import bill amounts to about 88 billion riyals annually, while
the number of medicines registered in Yemen is 20,000 items, the prices of
which increased by more than 200 percent due to the decline in the local
currency's price against the dollar, in addition to the levies imposed by the
militia, as its smuggling and counterfeiting activity increased dramatically
during the past five years. The market is full of many varieties of counterfeit
medicines, including medicines used to treat cancer and chronic diseases, after
the militia began a campaign to close dozens of pharmacies in Sanaa and granted
its members and leaders the right to open alternative pharmacies.
For its part, the Pharmacy Owners Syndicate confirmed that
only 5,000 pharmacies operate according to official permits, while another
13,000 pharmacies operate without fulfilling the legal procedures.
The Houthis sought to form a financial empire by seizing the
money and property of its opponents since their coup against the legitimate
government, as well as state property that was taken into the private ownership
of Houthi leaders. The militia also monopolized the trade of oil derivatives
and stopped the work of the companies that existed, froze their assets and
seized their properties, in addition to using the military transport sector and
military economic establishment facilities to monopolize the logistical
services of international relief organizations, such as providing warehouses
and transportation mechanisms, as well as incubating non-governmental
organizations instead of the independent organizations that existed, and
enabling these organizations to work as local partners to transport and
distribute relief materials, which the militia directs to serve its war effort.
The prices of most medicines increased by 200 percent
compared to their previous prices, driven by royalties and levies imposed by
the Houthi militia, which added a new burden on patients, especially those with
chronic diseases.