العربية

[Press Release]

Aug 8, 2019

The Government of Yemen holds the Southern Transitional Council responsible for the armed escalation in the interim capital of Aden, and for its serious consequences that threaten the security and safety of citizens and security and stability in general.

In its statement, the government reiterated its rejection of the irresponsible actions of the Southern Transitional Council, which amounted to the use of heavy weapons and the attempt to storm state institutions and army camps. The government regrets that those groups refused to spare the city of Aden and its peaceful inhabitants the dangers of slipping into chaos and fighting that will topple the civil peace and services that have been achieved during the few years following the liberation of Aden from the grip of the Iranian Houthi rebel militia.

It also stressed that, by assuming their national responsibilities the government, the army and security forces are committed to preserving state institutions and safety of citizens. With the support of all wise and honorable people and the brothers in the coalition, they will work to address all attempts to harm institutions and individuals. The statement pointed out that the government is working with the leadership of the coalition to form a committee to investigate the events in the city of Aden.

The Government renewed its invitation to the leadership of the coalition represented by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates to apply urgent and strong pressure on the Southern Transitional Council to stop any military movements in the city, and to oblige all security units and military formations to adhere to the instructions of the security and military establishment and not to rebel against the state and its institutions.

The government also called on political parties, all political and social actors, all wise people of Yemen to assume their national responsibility to reject, resist and condemn the calls of rebellion, war, and irresponsible adventures that, if not stopped, would lead the country into chaos and drag it into a dangerous slope.

The government said that the country has not yet overcame the consequences of the Houthi militias coup and rebellion, which led the state institutions and services systems to collapse, disrupted the public sector salary payments, led the economy to collapse and worsened the already catastrophic humanitarian crisis. This requires all sensible people to be responsible, putting reason, wisdom and supreme national interest above everything else in order to spare the city of Aden and the liberated areas the consequences of any rebellion, civil strife, chaos or catastrophic repercussions on people and property, which will present a serious blow to the efforts of the coalition and its mission in Yemen, and is in the interest of no one but the Houthi coup militia and the Iranian project in the region.

[Press Release] on the Death Sentences Issued by the Houthi Coup Militias against 30 kidnapped and Arbitrarily Arrested Detainees

July 17, 2019

The Government of the Republic of Yemen expressed its condemnation, in the strongest terms, of the death sentences issued by the Houthi coup militias against 30 kidnapped and arbitrarily arrested detainees, in a statement issued by the Ministry of Human Rights.

The government, in its statement, reiterates that this is the result of the mock trial by a court that has no jurisdiction, which violates the most basic judicial rules guaranteeing the integrity of the trial, the right of the accused to defend themselves, and the non-threat or detention of their lawyers in court hearings; Perceiving that the Houthi militias use the courts as a tool to oppress their oppositionists, asserting that the court is outlaw court where abductees have been subjected to illegal trials with false accusations.  

On 9th July 2019, after quitting 6 out of 36 kidnapped and detainees, the court under the control of the Houthi coup militias in the capital Sanaa sentenced to death 30 detainees after they were abducted from their homes and places of work. The prisoners have been exposed to enforced disappearance and subjected to brutal torture in custody for THREE years. They are mainly academics, professors, politicians, students, human rights defenders, and civilians.

On 10th July 2019 the Government of the Republic of Yemen condemned the Houthi militia's sentences and urged the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (UNOHCHR) and the UNSG Special Envoy to Yemen, Mr. Martin Griffiths, to intervene with all possible means to save these activists from the Houthi militia's extrajudicial execution, noting that this will undermine the peace process and negotiations on the file of the prisoners’ exchange according to the Stockholm agreement.

Day after day we see more Yemeni families fear death sentences from illegal coup courts after seeing their relatives being abducted and detained captive and now face serious charges through trumped-up charges in flagrant violation of all international laws and human rights laws.

Everyone has the right to a fair trial in both civil and criminal cases. The effective protection of all human rights depends on the means already available to the competent, independent and impartial courts of justice which can and should administer justice in an equitable manner. And access to justice, of course, is not available in the comic courts held by the Houthis militias.

The Embassy of the Republic of Yemen in the Hague represented by Ambassador Sahar Ghanem appeals to all official Dutch authorities and Human Rights organization to take a firm stand against these sentences which constitute a flagrant violation of human rights, especially as these sentences are carried out by the Houthis militias to suppress political activists, journalists and human rights defenders. And, we urge all human rights organizations to act immediately to save their lives, as verdicts could be handed down and the abductees might be executed.

The Sentences from a Legal Point of View

Since storming the capital Sanaa in September 2014, the Houthi militias assumed control of the justice system in the capital Sanaa. The Specialised Criminal Court of First Instance in Sanaa, which deals with crimes including terrorism, is one of justice system operated by the Houthi militias.

It is rather clear that the Houthis militias have progressively utilised the Specialised Criminal Court to target persons they deem to be opponents to their authority. As a result, the Supreme Judicial Council, Yemen’s highest judicial authority, had issued its decision No. (15) for the year 2018, ordering the shutdown of the Specialised Criminal Court of First Instance in Sanaa.

Therefore, the Supreme Judicial Council considers the sentence issued by the Houthi Criminal Court in Sanaa to execute 30 political prisoners and all the sentences issued by the penal court in Sanaa illegal and issued from an illegitimate court lacked its mandate and affiliate to an illegitimate governing authority.

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