Yemeni Govt Urges Int'l Community to Protect Women from Houthi Oppression
The Yemeni government called on the international community and human rights organizations to protect women from the oppression of the Iranian-backed Houthi militias in the areas under the group’s control.
Recently, Houthis arrested artist
and model Entisar al-Hammadi and subjected her, along with a number of her
friends, to humiliation and shame.
The group’s gunmen kidnapped
Hammadi, who was born to a Yemeni father and an Ethiopian mother, along with
her friends in Sanaa. They were taken for interrogation and charged with drug
trafficking and prostitution.
Hammadi’s kidnapping sparked local
and international outrage amid calls for the Houthis to release her immediately.
Minister of Information Moammar
al-Eryani called on the international community and human and women’s rights
organizations to take a firm stance against the Houthi militia’s abuse of
Yemeni women.
Eryani urged the international
community to pressure the militia to stop the unprecedented violations and
immediately release all the kidnapped women.
The Minister indicated that the
kidnapping and enforced disappearance of Hammadi for three months, along with
forcing her to sign confessions and trying to pressure her into prostitution
under the pretext of serving the country, confirms that Houthis’ crimes against
Yemeni women and attempts to sexually exploit them are part of a systematic
behavior.
Yemeni human rights activists in
Sanaa reported a few days ago that members of the Iran-backed militia are
trying to force the young artist into prostitution for the benefit of the group
in exchange for releasing her.
Dozens of jurists and activists
issued a statement stressing the need to release Hammadi, who they visited in
the central prison last Monday.
They also expressed their
solidarity with her lawyer Khaled al-Kamal who is receiving several threats for
defending his client.
The statement confirmed that
Hammadi and her friends were arrested without a formal charge, and she was only
carrying her handbag and phone.
The statement, which was signed by
politicians, lawyers, and human rights activists, stated that Hammadi “rejected
an offer to work” with the Houthis, without referring to the nature of this
work. However, her visitors, including Judge Abdul-Wahhab Qatran, said that she
was asked to become a prostitute for the group’s benefit.
In a lengthy Facebook post, Qatran
indicated that Hammadi reported the oppression, abuse, and injustice she was
subjected to, and a number of fabricated charges against her.
She was accused of drug possession
and prostitution, without evidence, stressing that the militias denied her
rights in a fair trial.
The group also tried to use
Hammadi for prostitution, claiming it is permissible for the sake of serving
the country, according to the judge.
Houthi militias dismissed the judge investigating Hammadi’s case after he demanded her release, and they threatened her defense lawyer aiming to force him to withdraw from the case.