Intimidation, enticement and constant recruitment: Houthis throw Africans into war in Yemen
The Iranian-backed Houthi terrorist
militia continues its violations in Yemen, encroaching on the citizens and
reaching the point of affecting stranded immigrants who migrated in search of a
better future.
Despite international warnings, the
forced recruitment of African refugees by the Houthis continues, as the militia
is pushing them to the battlefronts, where the refugees are forcibly recruited
after being threatened with death or imprisonment, according to local media
reports.
Constant
recruitment
Yemeni Minister of Information
Moammar al-Eryani referred to the Iranian-backed militia's continued
recruitment of African migrants and refugees and “throwing them into open
crematoriums of death” on various battlefronts, describing this as a “war crime
against humanity and a flagrant violation of international laws and covenants.”
Eryani cited in tweets the scene of
the funeral of an Ethiopian immigrant that was broadcast by the Houthi channel
Almasirah, pointing out that the terrorist militia deliberately lured African
refugees and migrants into the ranks of fighters to compensate for its mounting
losses as a result of its military campaign, especially in Marib governorate,
following the failure of the mobilization campaigns it organizes as a result of
the reluctance of the tribesmen to join its ranks.
War criminals
Eryani called on the United Nations,
the international community, human rights organizations and the International
Organization for Migration (IOM) to condemn the militia's recruitment of
African migrants and refugees and using them in hostilities, demanding the
prosecution of Houthi leaders and submitting them to the International Criminal
Court as war criminals.
The Houthis recently buried the body
of an Ethiopian refugee, Ahmed bin Shafi Sheikh Bashir Lazma, nicknamed Abu
Hussein, who was killed while participating in the fighting on the Marib front
in eastern Yemen.
Two years ago, the Houthis launched
recruitment campaigns among the refugees and appointed supervisors who have
experience in this matter, and their task was to mobilize the refugees, sort
them and classify them according to their experience in carrying arms.
Those campaigns included Africans of
different ages who were present as refugees in a number of Sanaa neighborhoods
and other areas under the control of the terrorist militia.
It is noteworthy that on March 7, a
detention center housing hundreds of migrants was exposed to a fire in Sanaa,
which is under the control of the Houthis, leaving dozens of victims among the
migrants, amid information that the militia was pushing them to the battle
fronts.