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Yemen calls for international action against Houthi terrorism


Yemeni calls for international action to confront the Houthi terrorist movements and their threat to international shipping routes and interests, as well as the security of the region and the world.

The Yemeni position called for an international effort against the military escalation of the Houthi militias in the region, the most recent of which was the attack on Emirati civilian installations.

The Yemeni government issued a call to the international community to confront Houthi terrorism and Iranian support.
The President of the Southern Sudan Transitional Council, Aidarous al-Zoubaidi, called on the international community to confront the danger of the Houthi terrorist militias alongside the Arab coalition, as the threat of these militias extends beyond the region to the whole region and the world.

The Yemeni National Resistance stressed the need for an international declaration to classify Houthi militias as a terrorist group and to deter them after they caused a humanitarian crisis that has exhausted Yemen and allied with terrorist groups that threaten regional and global security.

Military barracks

International and local reports in Yemen indicate that Houthi militias have transformed al-Hudaydah ports into military barracks and weapons reception stations, including ballistic missiles and Iranian-operated aviation through numerous smuggling networks.

This month, Houthi militias carried out a hacking operation against the UAE ship Rawabi, which carries medical equipment from the vital port of al-Hudaydah in what is not the first operation.

A U.S. ship was previously targeted by a missile attack and another against a UAE civilian naval vessel, and hundreds of naval mines were deployed from the province’s ports.

On Thursday night, Arab coalition aircraft targeted Houthi weapons in storage near the port of al-Hudaydah, a vital artery that has become a barracks that threatens Red Sea shipping.

According to sources, Houthi militias use the ports of al-Hudaydah as military headquarters and military bases to target international navigation, ship piracy, and transit traffic off the coast of al-Hudaydah, which is subject to the coup.

From a coastal location near al-Hudaydah port, influential Houthi leader Mohammed Ali al-Houthi posted a video on his Twitter account in which he threatened to target all the interests of the world from his position on the Red Sea coast in Hodeida city. He confirmed that his militia would not heed any international warnings.

The emergence of Al-Houthi and the issuing of threats confirm that the coup militias, under Iranian guidance, will continue their terrorist behavior targeting international corridors and shipping lines close to the coast of Yemen, which is a path of international interests of strategic importance.

International terrorism

International concern created by the Houthi terrorist militia to raise the ceiling of their crimes, which observers believe requires the activation of the provisions of international laws on the security of the sea, waterways and commercial shipping lines.

International laws classify the crimes of the Houthi militias as terrorist and organized crimes with an international dimension. Since the Houthi group is a coup militia that refuses to abide by Yemeni law, the authority to confront threats to international interests and corridors is the international community primarily to protect its interests and the safety of international navigation.

Under international law, the Houthi militias have committed a crime of international terrorism of greater gravity than acts of piracy aimed at obtaining material property, while the Houthi militias commit crimes of international terrorism, for political and military purposes, in accordance with the two

According to Yemeni politician and Nasserist Party leader Mujeeb al-Maqtari, the escalation of crimes and terrorist operations against Houthi militias has crossed all red lines and the international community must deal with these militias as a terrorist organization.

Al-Maqtari called for international action to enforce Security Council resolutions related to arms smuggling, dry up Iran’s military support for Houthi militias, and tighten measures and sanctions simultaneously.

He said that the threat of Houthi militias has gone beyond Yemen’s borders to the interests of the world in the seas and neighboring countries. He added that the national security of the region and the security of international shipping lanes are now at the mercy of Iranian missiles supplied to Houthi militias.

This Iranian-Houthi overreach, according to al-Maqtari, and tampering with the region’s security require international action to confront Tehran’s ambitions in the region, secure international interests, and protect Arab national security from infiltrations by local militias that act as advance forces of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard.

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