By 2014, Ansar Allah had secured control of Sana’a through a revolution of the people of Yemen, and in 2015, they were prepared to carry the move further South to take over Aden.
The West, and with that their most precious ally in the Golf, Saudi Arabia, were fearful that “The strategic straits at the Bab al Mandab could be in the Houthis’ hands. It was a very difficult challenge for an untried team in the royal palace.”
The interim president of Yemen, Hadi, had signed the documents in early 2015, renouncing his duties.
They should have eliminated Hadi! Instead, the fake Yemeni despot run away knocking on door-to-door until securance of the satanic Saudi services.
A ruthless bombing campaign started under the Saudi-Emiratis, who led a Sunni majority coalition consisting of nine genocidal gulf states, all members of the Gulf Cooperation Council against the poorest Arab Nation.
The New York Times described what amounts to a succession of criminal atrocities: “Year after year, the bombs fell – on wedding tents, funeral halls, fishing boats and a bus, killing thousands of civilians and helping turn Yemen into the world’s worst humanitarian crisis. Weapons supplied by American companies, approved by American officials, allowed Saudi Arabia to pursue the reckless campaign.”
Backed by the US, UK, EU, UN, and various other protagonists, the Sunni coalition imposed an air sea land embargo on Yemen that crippled the Nation’s economy.
Today, over 80 per cent of Yemeni are dependent on humanitarian aid, over 2.3 million children suffer from malnutrition, and more than half a million children are on the brink of starvation (SAM).
The UN – the culprit – has recently named Saudi Arabia the chair of the United Nations Women’s Rights Commission.
The good-for-nothing United Nations Group of Eminent International and Regional Experts on Yemen, disbanded under Saudi pressure, late 2021.
Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah on the incompetence and indifference of the “international community” and the UN, and the weapons of the Resistance. Political Aya
The UN fanciful stagnated on the peculiar number 377.000 dead Yemeni, when in fact the war has cost millions of Yemeni lives through direct and indirect causes of war.
Yemen’s population number has barely increased since the start of the war despite the birth rate being at 4 children per woman.
There are over 4.5 million internally displaced people in Yemen who have no right to return to their homes.
Even if they were able to return, there is no guarantee that they could claim their houses as other internally displaced persons may have inhabited their homes.
About 6 million children have no access to education or were forced to drop out of school.
International funding for education in Yemen has been steadily dwindling over the past few years. In 2023, less than 20% of the education funding requirements were met in the Humanitarian Response Plan.
Since August 2016, government employees have not been paid as the Saudi-led coalition has removed the central bank from Sana’a to Aden. With this, over 160.000 employees, including the teachers of the nation, have ceased payments.

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