Houthis Kidnap Medics for Refusing to Treat Wounded Fighters at Battlefronts

Houthi militias in Yemen are back to kidnapping health workers, Sanaa-based medics told Asharq Al-Awsat. The abduction campaign was likely restarted after physicians refused to help the Iran-backed group treat its injured fighters at frontlines.
Public hospitals, like Al Thawra
General Hospital, are being targeted for the capture of their doctors and
workers, the sources reported.
Taha Al-Mutawakil, the health
minister of the Houthi self-styled government, had ordered a number of
hospitals to put together teams of combat medics that would deploy to battlefronts
and provide emergency medical treatment to wounded soldiers.
The directive, however, was
snubbed by many in the health sector. Their rejection forced Houthis to resort
to kidnapping health staffers, sources noted.
In the last few days, more than 12
doctors and 17 healthcare givers have been abducted from hospitals in Sanaa,
they revealed.
What is more is that Houthi
authorities fired a number of administrative officials in the health sector and
replaced them with their loyalists.
After Al-Mutawakil’s call for
enlisting emergency medics, registration was open for deployment to
battlefronts in the governorates of Marib, Al-Jawf, Dhale and Hajjah.
Disregarding the strains weighing
down on the local health sector, which has been weakened by years of wars,
Houthis are exploiting resources at hospitals, kidnapping physicians and
stealing medical aid sent by international relief organizations.
“At a time when the coronavirus is killing
dozens, if not hundreds, of Yemenis living under militia rule, Houthis are
pushing for more exploiting of health institutions and workers to serve their
war effort,” a Sanaa-based health worker, who requested anonymity, complained
to Asharq Al-Awsat.
Last week, the UN warned of the
“imminent collapse of the health situation in Yemen”.
The United Nations Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said on Twitter: “20.1 million
people in Yemen are in need of medical assistance.”
It added that 51 per cent of the country's health facilities were fully functioning, noting that “67 out of 333 districts do not have doctors.”