Targeting education with bullets of ignorance: Houthis risking lives of Yemeni children, says researcher
The internationally recognized Yemeni government has accused
the Houthi coup group of promoting myths and risking the lives of children by
leaving them at the mercy of the myths of charlatans and profiteers. The Yemeni
Ministry of Health condemned and denounced the Houthi's recent symposium titled
"Vaccines are neither safe nor effective," which considered vaccines
to be a conspiracy aimed at eliminating Muslims and fighting Quranic medicine.
The Yemeni government argued that sponsoring such fraudulent
events is a risk to the future of Yemen's children. The government statement
affirmed that the duty of the Ministry of Health is to spread the sound health
media message and deliver accurate information. Preventive work, which includes
vaccinations, is the best way to confront diseases.
The Yemeni Ministry of Health demanded serious steps be
taken to put pressure on the Houthis to avert the danger that threatens
millions of children in Yemen. The government also expressed condemnation of
the promotion of such dark ideas that do not take into account the safety of
Yemenis and the lives and future of their children.
The Houthi's behavior is reckless, and the Yemeni
government's statement called it a disaster that must be addressed by everyone.
Yemen has been facing a humanitarian crisis for years, with millions of
children at risk of starvation, disease, and death. The Houthi group's
promotion of anti-vaccination myths will only exacerbate the situation and lead
to more suffering for the Yemeni people.
The Yemeni government is urging the international community
to take action to stop the Houthi group from spreading dangerous myths and
risking the lives of Yemeni children. The Houthi group must be held accountable
for their reckless behavior, and Yemeni children must be protected from the
bullets of ignorance.
Iranian-backed Houthi coup group's promotion of myths is
risking the lives of Yemeni children and leaving them at the mercy of the myths
of charlatans and charlatans, warns the Yemeni government. According to the
researcher on Iranian affairs, Osama Al-Hateimi, myth is one of the most
important means that Iran's arms rely on in recruiting followers and pushing
them to fight many battles that are being promoted as a form of jihad. This is
consistent with a long cultural legacy and extends historically from the myths
on the basis of which a doctrinal entity was built that seeks to extend its
influence over the Islamic world.
The researcher, in a special statement to the Reference,
says that these myths, that the Houthis have been claiming about their fighters
on the battle fronts in the war against legitimacy in Yemen, are a model that
clearly embodies the extent of their ability to employ myth in turning against
the situation in Yemen. The Houthi media has been talking about fighters who
died for a period of time during which they entered paradise and met their
loved ones, then came back to life again to tell what they saw. The Houthis
also claim the participation of snakes and scorpions in the fighting, which
unfortunately deceive some of those who have subjected their minds and emotions
to this crude blackmail.
Osama Al-Hateimi says it is not surprising that the Houthi
myths also include health and medical axioms known in the whole world and
related to the importance of vaccines and serums. The Houthis claim that they
are just a Western idea aimed at investment, trade and aggressive targeting of
peoples. However, scientific experiments have proven that those vaccines were a
direct cause of the elimination of many diseases and epidemics rampant in the
whole world, which wiped out millions of people. The researcher warns that the
Houthis seek to win their battle by any means, even if it is by eliminating the
mind completely and exposing people to the ravages of diseases and epidemics,
which is beginning to appear. Some diseases that had completely disappeared
years ago, such as polio, will return.
Al-Hateimi believes that such claims are a Houthi attempt to
draw attention away from the failure of the coup group and the international
isolation in which they have become trapped as a group that practices
terrorism. The Houthi myths contradict the facts, and while they attack an
international organization that plays its role as the World Health Organization
because of the issue of vaccines, they blame the organization for not giving
the Houthis the solutions they need for patients with kidney failure. It
reveals that it is nothing more than a poor employment of superstition, he
adds.