Robert Fares
Despite the allegations and lies propagated by the Iranian-backed Houthi militia in Yemen, it cannot deny the successive defeats and disappointments even when it buries its dead secretly. The Houthis continue to bury the bodies of dozens of dead, including its leaders, after the militia burned them in crematoriums. Media reported that this happened to 48 dead bodies in several governorates under Houthi control from May 13-18.
The sources said that Dhamar governorate continues its progress in terms of presenting its children to the Houthi crematoria, ranking first after the capital Sanaa, where Dhamar gained its share of 16 people dead during those six days.
The sources added that Sanaa had a share of 11 dead, ranking second in the month of May, while Al-Bayda governorate saw six deaths, followed by Imran governorate with three dead, and then the governorates of Taiz, Al-Mahwit and Ibb, which each had two dead, and one dead in each of Hodeidah, Sa’dah, Hajjah and Rima.
In order not to resort to any lies by the terrorist militia, the Yemeni news agency Khabar published the names of 48 dead who had been buried during the six days:
Dhamar Governorate:
1 – Ali Hussein Hussein Al-Qarn
2 – Aseel Khalid Muhammad Al-Qalihi
3 – Abdullah Wazaa Nasir Wazaa
4 – Ali Abdulmalik Al-Arshi
5 – Bakr Saad Al-Qubaili
6 – Ahmad Ali Al-Marhbi
7 – Ahmed Mohamed Salem Al-Hakami
8 – Abdul Ilah Saleh Abdulaziz Al-Shaabi
9 – Abdullah Ali Al-Raboui
10 – Ali Muhammad Al-Shaabi
11 – Mahdi Ali Al-Dailami
12 – Hashem Ali Al-Dailami
13 – Samir Ahmad Al-Athribi
14 – Ali Abdullah Ahmad Murshid Al-Mughrabi
15 – Ali Abdullah Mohsen Al-Fadhli
16 – Anwar Hammoud Musaad Al-Sameri
Sanaa Governorate:
17 – Jalal Jamil Saleh Al-Shukaili
18 – Bassam Ahmed Hadi
19 – Musheer Saleh Muhammad Al-Thabti
20 – Himyar Yahya Lala
21 – Khalil Mahmoud Ahmed Khalil
22 – Ismail Abdulaziz Ahmed Al-Hadi
23 – Moataz Mohammed Mohammed Saeed Al-Mashwali
24 – Ziyad Salih Ali Muhammad Al-Matari
25 – Ziyad Muhammad Naji Ali al-Badani
26 – Ali Jamal Ali Hassan Ashish
27 – Ahmed Faisal Ahmed Saleh Sorour
Al-Bayda Governorate:
28 – Yahya Al-Riyami
29 – Shaddad Al-Riyami
30 – Hussein Al-Riyami
31 – Ayesh Al-Riyami
32 – Abdul Nasser Abdullah Qarmoush Al-Salali
34 – Hassan Abdo Nasser Al-Hamzi
Imran Governorate:
35 – Captain / Mohamed Ahmed Saleh Al-Badai
37 – Marwan Saif Abdullah Al-Omari
38 – Saddam Hussein Abdullah Al-Jadri
Taiz Governorate:
39 – Ibrahim Muhammad Al-Surori
40 – Safwan Muhammad Hassan Al-Burihi
Al-Mahwit Governorate:
41 – Ahmed Muhammad Rizk Al-Mahwiti
42 – Ibrahim Muhammad Yahya al-Faqih
Ibb Governorate:
43 – Abdul-Malik Muhammad Ahmad al-Shami
44 – Hamir Abdo Mohamed Ahmed Al-Dhamari
Hodeidah Governorate:
45 – Ali Belghith Mubarak Jamii
Saada Governorate:
46 – Ali Abdullah Hussein Al-Mallhi
Hajjah Governorate:
47 – Khaled Zumouh Shouei Abbas Al-Khanbani
Rima Governorate:
48 – Ibrahim Mahdi Ismail Al-Hadidi
In the defeated militia’s first reaction to express its anger, the Houthis fired a rocket at Red Sea mills and silos storing wheat, which resulted in damage to parts of the buildings and material losses to the mills.
The Houthis continue their intransigence by violating the United Nations ceasefire in Hodeidah by targeting public and private properties and residential neighborhoods with various types of weapons and explosives, leaving widespread damage to infrastructure and public housing, in addition to hundreds of civilian victims.
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