Feverish competition between Houthi leaders to rob real estate

English - Thursday 22 December 2022 الساعة 04:38 pm
Sana'a, NewsYemen, exclusive:

 Local sources in Sana'a revealed a feverish race between the leaders of the first ranks of the terrorist Houthi militia, the Iranian arm in Yemen, to rob land and real estate, taking advantage of the weak authority of the judiciary and the state and the absence of the security services.

The sources indicated that the race is between the second man in the Houthi militia, Abdullah Aida Al-Razami, who is appointed as an inspector in the Ministry of Interior, and the leader Abdul-Khaliq Al-Houthi, the brother of the militia leader appointed as the commander of the central military zone and special operations affiliated with the militias on the one hand, and a member of the so-called political council of the militia, Muhammad Ali Al-Houthi.  Who also heads a newly created department called the “Higher Committee for the Justice System,” as well as the leader, Misfer Al-Shaer, who manages the judicial guard apparatus, on the other hand.

According to the sources told (NewsYemen), the two leaders, Abdullah Aida Al-Razami and Abd Al-Khaliq Al-Houthi, along with leaders through a military committee in the group's Ministry of Defense, seized other vast areas of mountains and lands close to military sites in the regions of Haiz, Dar Salam, Dabar Khaira, Sawan, Bani Hashish and Hamedan in Sana'a.  In conjunction with the movements of Muhammad Al-Houthi and Al-Shaer to expand on other areas.

 It pointed out that the Houthi leaders use the newly created Endowments Authority and the Ministry of Justice to legitimize the looting and robbery of endowment and land property in general, in addition to forcing legal trustees and judges to issue rulings and own public lands to loot under the cover of the state, and to edit and forge documents that legitimize this matter.

In an unprecedented precedent, the Houthi militia has created many entities outside the entity of the hijacked state under the pretext of resolving issues of land disputes in parallel entities whose aim is to disrupt the judiciary as an official institution governed by laws, regulations, and regulations, and administrative leaders qualified scientifically, administratively, and technically.  And it replaced them with illegal entities, most notably (the Office of Redress of Grievances in the Presidency, the Justice System, the Al-Razami Office, the Identity Channel Office, committees to review land issues, and the Committee for Receiving Complaints on the Forgery of Real Estate Documents), often, these entities did not succeed in resolving disputes as much as they succeeded in exhausting citizens' rights, time, and money.

Press estimates indicate that more than 86% of the real estate was looted by the Houthis, and only 14% of the land and sites that they declared to be preserved and considered state property, including former state property and lands owned by their owners, and the sites of mosques demolished by the Houthis, Hadith homes, orphanages and homes for the disabled.