Houthis continue to marginalize Yemeni women: Their role is tenderness and affection only
The Houthis in Yemen are increasingly restricting women's
freedoms, where the Iranian-backed group practices several violations against
them, including increasing restrictions on their freedom of movement, requiring
a mahram (male guardian) to allow them to travel, and reducing their social
role in public life.
Mass abuse and violations
Yemeni women have not experienced injustice, arbitrariness
and humiliation over the past centuries such as those they face during the rule
of the Houthi militia in a short period of time, as the crimes committed
against them include murder, kidnapping, enforced disappearance, torture,
insults, slander, harassment, fabrication of charges, intimidation, beating,
displacement, and other crimes committed by the Houthi militia against women.
Yemeni women have obtained a share of the unjust laws of the
Houthi authorities and their unjust arbitrariness. Since the militia's monopoly
on power, it has begun to intensify its pressures and transgressions against
women under the pretext of preserving morals, values and faith culture,
claiming that many women's professions, work, and even their customs are
contrary to morals and fall within the list of prohibitions that the Houthi
militia criminalizes in accordance with its extremist vision.
Demanding firm positions
More than 120 community and civil
organizations called on the international community, the United Nations, UN and
US envoys, and human rights bodies to take firm positions, condemn the criminal
practices against women in Houthi-controlled areas, and put real pressure on
the leaders of the militia to force them to stop their grave and continuous
violations against women.
In a joint statement issued in March on
the occasion of International Women's Day, the organizations said that they
condemn in the strongest terms the violations committed by the terrorist Houthi
militia against Yemeni women, including violence in all forms, harassment,
discrimination, restriction of freedoms, and deprivation of their rights
guaranteed by the constitution.
It emphasized that women and girls in militia-controlled
areas are subjected to systematic violations, including restricting their
travel without a guardian, preventing access to health and reproductive care,
preventing them from working, segregating the sexes in public places, and
promoting anti-women attitudes.
The statement noted that the militia has adopted a
discriminatory approach towards the status of women with the aim of suffocating
women and girls and erasing them from the public sphere, describing them as
incomplete or inhuman, and bringing shame and evil to the extent that the
militia confiscated mannequins displaying clothes in shops, as well as
exercising other restrictions on personal freedoms such as cosmetics, singing
at weddings and owning smartphones.
Houthis restrict role of women
Houthi leader Abdul Malik al-Houthi made new statements
regarding his militia's position on the role of Yemeni women in building
society and participating in various forums, addressing Yemeni women that
practical matters that need direct communication come within the framework of
men's responsibilities.
Houthi affirmed in a televised lecture, broadcast by
Al-Masirah channel on Monday, July 17, that there is no need for women to have
direct relations with foreign men, referring to the restriction of women's
participation in narrow and limited career fields.
He explained that the role of women in this life is
tenderness and affection only, and he considered women's consultation in the
areas of basic responsibility of men to be the advice of non-specialists in
this role, as it is a role in which women have no experience.
Houthi accused those he described as enemies of seeking to
separate women from their families, saying that Islam placed care and expenses
on men.