Houthi crimes: Innocent Yemenis pay price for American decision (Part 3)

Despite the crimes committed by the Houthi group in Yemen
over the past six years, the new US administration has granted it a safety card
after canceling the militia’s classification as a terrorist organization, which
was a strong push for the militia to commit more heinous crimes against the
innocent.
During the past few days, Yemen has witnessed an increase in
the frequency of targeting civilians and civilian facilities. Despite the
coalition forces thwarting Houthi missiles and drones, some of the shrapnel hit
civilians and homes.
The decision to cancel the designation of the militia as a
terrorist organization gave Iran and the Houthis the conviction that the
administration of US President Joe Biden would not use any kind of force
against them, since the United States canceled former President Donald Trump's
designations of the militia as a foreign terrorist organization, claiming that
this step comes for humanitarian aid to reach the Yemeni people. However, this
did not change the behavior of the terrorist militia, as it has intensified its
attacks with missiles and drones on civilians and civilian facilities.
Although the Coalition to Support Legitimacy in Yemen
intercepted and destroyed hundreds of missiles and aircraft before targeting
civilians, the attempts of the Houthi terrorist militia to attack civilians in
a deliberate and systematic manner constitute war crimes, and therefore the
joint forces command of the coalition takes and implements the necessary
operational measures to protect civilians in accordance with international
humanitarian law and customary rules.
The protection of civilians is a fundamental pillar of
international humanitarian law. Armed conflicts are governed by international
humanitarian law, which calls for the protection of civilians and not to expose
them to harm, while violations of the law are considered “war crimes”.
Several countries described the repeated terrorist acts
carried out by the Houthis as a “war crime that endangers the lives of
civilians,” requiring them to be held accountable in accordance with
international humanitarian law.
Fifty-six Yemeni civil society organizations condemned the
silence of the international community towards the crimes of the Iranian-backed
Houthi terrorist militia and its targeting of refugee camps and residential
neighborhoods in Marib governorate, which has caused the death and injury of
civilians, including women and children.
Human rights organizations confirmed in several reports that
Houthis’ crimes increased dramatically after the new US administration made the
mistake by removing the militia from the terrorist list, as Houthi practices
are not different from the practices of other terrorist organizations and
groups around the world. The decision to cancel the classification encourages
the militia to escalate and intensify its arrest campaigns against human rights
defenders and activists in Sanaa and militia-controlled areas.
The human rights organizations called on the Biden
administration to reconsider, especially since the Houthi militia escalated its
military attacks in the governorates of Marib and Al-Jawf, as well as
violations against human rights in their areas of control. Therefore, the US
administration's removal of the Houthis from the terrorist list did not solve
the humanitarian crisis that has occurred for years, but rather increased and
complicated it, meaning the militia should be redesignated a terrorist
organization.