US classing Houthis as religious persecutors not enough, say Yemeni activists

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Hind Al Soulia - Riyadh - Alongside ISIS, Al Qaeda, Boko Haram, the Taliban and Somalia’s Al Shaba, the United States this week designated Yemen’s Houthi rebels a radical group that carries out systematic, egregious violations of religious freedoms.

The move was welcomed in Aden and in the Yemeni government who said it was a step towards a turning point in the US view of the rebels but rights groups said that the move came too late.

The American government classification on Sunday says the Houthi rebels are a group of particular concern.

“These designations underscore the United States’ commitment to protect those who seek to exercise their freedom of religion or belief. We believe that everyone, everywhere, at all times, should have the right to live according to the dictates of their conscience,” the statement said.

“We will continue to challenge state and non-state entities that seek to infringe upon those fundamental rights and to ensure they are held to account for their actions,” the statement added.

The US decision to designate the Houthi group in the list of groups that violate religious freedoms was welcomed by the Yemeni government as a step towards a shift in US policy regarding the rebel group.

Yemen's Deputy Human Rights Minister Majed Fadhil told The National that the move was good but more was needed.

“Designating the Houthi militia in the list of the religious freedom violators is not enough, they must be internationally prosecuted and punished for the war crimes they have been committing against the Yemeni people in general and against the religious minorities in particular,” he said.

Members of the Baha'i faith demonstrate outside a state security court during a hearing in the case of a fellow Baha'i man charged with seeking to establish a base for the community in Yemen, in the country's capital Sanaa April 3, 2016. Reuters
Members of the Baha'i faith demonstrate outside a state security court during a hearing in the case of a fellow Baha'i man charged with seeking to establish a base for the community in Yemen, in the country's capital Sanaa April 3, 2016. Reuters

“The Houthi group have been committing severe violations and horrible crimes against the Yemenis entirely including the religious minorities,” Mr Fadhil said.

He specifically pointed to the country’s Bahai minority as several of the group’s leaders are on trial in cases condemned by the US and others as tantamount to religious persecution.

“The Bahai minority got the lion’s share of the Houthis abuses, they have been rounding the followers of this faith to their prisons, dozens of the Bahais have been detained in Houthi [prisons] in Sanaa for more than five years, the Houthis torture them and try them for fake trumped-up charges” Mr Fadhil explained.

“The leader of the Bahai minority, Hamed bin Haiydara, has been held in solitary confinement by the Houthi rebels in Sanaa for more than five years, he was exposed to brutal torture caused him movement disability,” he said.

Anthony Vance, the Director of the US Bahai Office of Public Affairs, elaborated on the abuses his co-religionists face in Yemen at the hands of the rebel Houthi movement.

“The abuses against the Bahais in Yemen have been well-documented, and repeatedly publicized in news outlets around the world,” he told The National.

“Such abuses include the ongoing court case of Hamed bin Haydara, who was sentenced to death in 2018 on false charges, the arbitrary imprisonment and indictment of several other Bahais, and the continued harassment against other members of our community,” he explained.

“We urge the Houthis to stop their religiously motivated persecution against the Bahais. It is probably no coincidence that their behaviour towards the Bahais mirrors that of their Iranian benefactors,” Mr Vance added, pointing to similar targeted harassment, imprisonment and marginalisation of the religion’s followers in Iran.

A Yemeni soldier (R) keeps watch as Bahai members hold banners during a protest against the trial of member of the Bahai leader Hamed Haydara, outside the state security court in Sanaa, Yemen, 03 April 2016. EPA
A Yemeni soldier keeps watch as Bahai members hold banners during a protest against the trial of member of the Bahai leader Hamed Haydara, outside the state security court in Sanaa. EPA

The spokesperson of the Bahai minority in Yemeni, Abdullah Al Olofi, described the US step to include the Houthis in its list of religious violators as a step taken too late, but added that the US is not alone in this.

“Not just the US, but the international community is late to designate the Houthis in the list of the entities of concern due to the violations committed by the Houthi authorities against the Bahais and the other minorities in Yemen,” Mr Al Olofi told The National.

“I expect other nations to take the same action against the Houthis after the statement which was issued by the US department of state,” Mr Al Olofi added.

Lawyer Hani Al Aswadi, the head of the My Right Centre for Human Rights and Freedoms said he considered the American resolution “not enough” pointing out it was not just the Bahais who have faced persecution but also Sunni Muslim religious groups and the country’s small Jewish community who he said are being driven from the country.

The Yemeni lawyer and the human rights activist Huda Al Sarari described the US declaration against the Houthis as a change in the American policy regarding the Houthi rebels in Yemen.

“The resolution …indicates a clear change in the American policy regarding the Houthis as the US has been turning a blind eye to their crimes against the Yemeni people for more than five years,” Ms Al Sarari told The National.

“We as human rights organizations and advocates must make use of the American decision against the Houthis,” she said. They should be “pushing the case to the International Criminal Court to be internationally persecuted and tried for their war crimes.”

Updated: December 24, 2019 03:34 PM

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