Arrest and torture: Tragic facts of Houthi persecution against Africans in Yemen

The terrorist Houthi militia is working to exert oppression against Africans in Yemen, forcing them to flee to neighboring countries.
In the same context, the Houthi militia deported hundreds of
African immigrants on Saturday, April 3, the day after the dispersal of a
peaceful sit-in in Sanaa by force of arms, which led to the killing and arrest
of many of them.
Yemeni activists circulated a video clip on social media of
the arrival of dozens of Ethiopian refugees to the town of Haifan in southern
Taiz Governorate on the borders of Lahij and the liberated Aden, after the
Houthi militia expelled them from Sanaa by force.
Tragic scene
The video footage shows migrants trying to help each other
to walk and elderly women walking on their crutches by force.
According to the Yemeni Al-Mashhad website, Yemeni sources
revealed that the Houthi militia deported the migrants from Sanaa days after an
open sit-in in front of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees to
demand an international investigation into the victims of the horrific fire
that occurred last month.
The Houthis also launched a widespread campaign of arrests,
and citizens in the city of Dhamar in central Yemen were made to pledge not to
return to the areas controlled by the militia in the north of the country.
Sources confirmed the arrival of the first batch of migrants
to areas under the control of the internationally recognized Yemeni government
in Haifan, and they are now on their way to the temporary capital, Aden.
Among the deportees were women, one of whom left her
children at home alone and went out to join her comrades in the sit-in, but she
was arrested and deported, according to information from Yemeni human rights
sources.
The sources emphasized that the Houthi militia not only
expelled hundreds of African refugees, but also proceeded to loot their
personal properties.
On Friday, April 2, two migrants were killed after the
Houthis used force and live bullets to disperse African migrants at the sit-in,
according to Yemeni media.
Media reported that the Houthis had surrounded the sit-in
and stormed it, and as a result, two people were killed, while 220 Ethiopian
refugees, including 55 women, and 45 Somalis were arrested and taken to an
unknown destination.
The Houthis had threatened to disperse the sit-ins in Sanaa
more than once, and on Friday, armored vehicles and riot control forces were
present.
Houthi crimes
The Houthi militia’s deportation of peacefully settling
refugees in Sanaa is considered by lawyers and human rights defenders as a
crime comparable to the holocaust it committed in the Immigration and Passports
Authority detention center.
The Yemeni government condemned the forced deportation
carried out by the Iranian-backed Houthi militia against hundreds of African
migrants who had organized a sit-in in front of the UNHCR in the seized
capital, Sanaa.
According to Minister of Information, Culture and Tourism
Moammar Al-Eryani, the government said that the migrants were demanding an
international investigation into the burning of dozens of their comrades by the
Houthi militia in a detention prison on March 7.
Eryani noted in a series of posts on Twitter that
the terrorist Houthi militia had brutally attacked the participants of the
sit-in who were demanding accountability for those involved in the holocaust of
African migrants.
This attack resulted in the death of a number of migrants
and the injury of others, and they were arrested and forcibly deported en masse
in cars and dumped in areas under the control of the legitimate government,
according to Eryani.
The Yemeni minister called on the international community
and international organizations concerned with human rights and refugee protection,
led by the International Organization for Migration, to condemn these practices
as crimes against humanity.
The attack also “reflects the extent of the terrorist Houthi
militia’s disregard for the rules of international humanitarian law and the laws
for the protection of refugees and migrants,” Eryani said.
Preliminary information indicates that the number of African
refugees who were expelled by the Houthi militia from Sanaa and deported to the
liberated Yemeni regions reaches more than 500 immigrants, of whom 210 are
males and 200 children and women, all of whom are Ethiopians, in addition to 45
Somali immigrants and others of different nationalities.
On March 25, the Houthi militia suppressed a peaceful
protest of immigrants in front of the UNHCR building, which prompted African
communities to impose a sit-in to demand accountability for the perpetrators of
the crime in Sanaa.
The horrific fire that occurred on March 7 resulted in the
death and injury of 400 Ethiopians. According to the testimonies of survivors
and international and local organizations, the Houthis resorted to burying the
victims and obliterating evidence in advance of the formation of any committees
to investigate their crime.