He advised a Houthi and Islahi rapprochement in Sana'a and Marib .. My brothers: Our leadership is imprisoned in Riyadh - video

English - Thursday 25 March 2021 الساعة 08:55 am
Sanaa, NewsYemen, Exclusive

The leader of the Islah party (the Muslim Brotherhood in Yemen) and political activist Nasser al-Qawas advised the Houthis and the youth of the Islah party in Marib that they are "the ideological closest to each other", and said that the next battle in Marib is to get rid of the reform youth as a "terrorist group in the eyes of Saudi Arabia and the UAE." ".

In a televised interview with the Houthi (Identity) channel, the Brotherhood political activist and founder of the Security Committee in Change Square in Sana'a in 2011 AD revealed interesting details about the forces of the First Armored Division, the youth of the JMP, and the hot events during that period, including Friday of Dignity.

The Brotherhood leader Nasser al-Qawas attacked what he described as (The Attacks of Afash) and said that he was kidnapped for the second time in Sanaa by those he described as “Afash's tails,” who said that they are present in all the joints of the state and that they are the reason for “the rift between Ansar Allah and reform, and they are the biggest reason for escape Reform youth from Sana'a. "

Al-Kawas considered that September 21, 2014 AD is a coup "as long as they are in their wings and in their formations are the tails of Afash, so they are considered a coup until they are eliminated." As he put it.

In his evaluation of the performance of the Islah party, he said that reform after 2015 AD is divided into reform inside the country and reform outside the country, and that the latter is being led from a hotel outside the country, considering that “the prisoner has no judgment” and “the forced person has no divorce.” The current leadership of his party is "a detained leadership in Riyadh," and added: "The current leadership does not represent us, so divorce of an impeller is not taken into account."

Brotherhood leader Nasser al-Qawas praised what he described as the clarity of the steadfast vision (Houthis) in Change Square 2011 for standing against the Gulf initiative and against Hadi’s election, and he said that the joint parties were not of the size of the event - as a political bearer of the revolution - adding sarcastically and sarcastically: “We are carrying out a revolution to topple the party. He is a corrupt politician, so we drop the party leader and bring in the party vice president to lead the country. "

He reviewed acts of violence and violations of the rights of independent youth belonging to left-wing parties in Change Square in 2011, indicating as well the training of marching committees on the manufacture and use of packages of plutofs, zarkif, bows and stones.

After Friday of Dignity, the Brotherhood leader and political activist Nasser al-Qawas revealed that they had arrested groups of cooperating residents of the area and not those involved in sniping the youth.

Pointing out that they broke into a house and grabbed a person and threw him from the roof of the house to the ground, “It was not proven that he was killed or thrown.” He added, “We gathered more than 20 people in the security committee in two rooms for investigation in the mosque, and after dinner we took them out by ambulances on the basis that they were wounded.

After the date of March 21 and the joining of the forces of the First Armored Division, Al-Kawas said, that the order committee in the square turned to pursuing what he described as (gays and market girls).

Al-Qawas considered that Friday of Dignity is one of the mistakes of the Square administration, referring to his proposal to demolish the new wall on Ring Road at the moment of its construction, but he was told that the wall will be demolished on Friday, warning that more than 100 people will be killed on Friday. He said, "Today there will be one or two dead people, but on Friday there will be 100, and it happened as I expected."

He justified Friday's choice to bully those he described as the supporters of the revolution who are not seated and who come to pray, and their number is estimated in the thousands.

Speaking about the elections and the legitimacy of the majority, the Brotherhood leader Nasser al-Qawas said that the 2003 parliamentary elections were not fair, but they were not rigged to the extent that we imagine that the conference did not obtain a majority. "We do not lie and believe the lie."

He explained: "The 2003 elections, the reform really won 100 seats, and the conference really exceeded 150," claiming that fraud took place in 50 to 60 constituencies, adding: "But these districts do not strip the majority and legitimacy from the conference even if it is taken from it. We do not lie to ourselves." ".