Mohammed Abdul Ghaffar
The Houthi group attempted to control the reins of power in Yemen after turning against the constitutional legitimacy in the country, trying to serve the interests and objectives of the mullahs, which control it.
In a flagrant fall of the Yemeni government forces, the Houthis quickly and easily succeeded in taking control of the Yemeni capital Sanaa on September 21, 2014, after they took control of the headquarters of the 6th Division and the 1st Armored Division, the 4th Brigade Command of the Revolutionary Guards, the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces, and the Moral Guidance Department, with little resistance.
Security guards at Radio Sanaa, the prime minister’s office, and the ministries of health and information also handed over their positions to the Houthis without fighting.
Punishing the people
The Yemeni people were not convinced by the leaders of the Iranian-backed Houthi militia, so they stood up against them, formed resistance forces in cooperation with the Saudi-led Arab Coalition to Support Legitimacy, and sought to expel the Houthis and those of the Al-Islah Brigades.
This has disturbed the leaders of the two terrorist parties, whether Houthi or Al-Islah, so they decided to punish the Yemeni people and forced them to yield to their demands by preventing them access to aid from regional countries, as well as medicine.
Serving the militia for free
The Houthi Health Minister Taha al-Mutawakil issued a decision requiring doctors at private hospitals in Sanaa to work free of charge in government hospitals controlled by the terrorist militia, Yemeni press sources reported on Friday, August 30.
The Houthi minister formed a committee to restrict doctors working in private hospitals and issued a decision to oblige them to work in government hospitals free of charge.
It is clear that the new Houthi extortion opened the door for Houthi supervisors in the Ministry of Health to blackmail doctors working in private hospitals, and the choice between paying royalties or raising their name as violators, and threatening to deprive them of their source of income.
He pointed out that the Houthi action comes at a time when the militia has imposed income taxes on all workers in the private health sector.
The Houthi militia recently closed 25 private hospitals completely and partially to extortion on investors in the health sector to deliver large sums in return for allowing the reopening of hospitals or closed departments.
The Iranian-backed militia aims to improve its image before the Yemeni citizens and to make them believe that the Houthis are the main source of treatment inside Yemen.
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