The Yemeni government will not accept the continued violations of the Huthi militias, the Yemeni Minister of Local Administration, Chairman of the Higher Relief Committee Abdul-Raqeeb Fath said that the Yemeni government will not accept the continued violations of the Huthi militias. Some UN organizations suspend aid is not a solution.

He added that Yemeni President Abdurbo Mansour Hadi called for the need to deliver aid to all Yemeni people without exception, including the un-liberated governorates, based on the keenness of the legitimate government on its people in all governorates.

He said that the government has submitted to international organizations and donors a number of mechanisms and solutions to avoid any violations against the relief operations by the coup militias, and to expeditious delivery of relief aid in record time and at the lowest costs, pointing out that these mechanisms and solutions approved by a number of donors and applied by some UN organizations, Through the decentralization of relief work, the use of ports and airports in the liberated governorates to receive and receive relief aid, the transfer of all the offices of the main organizations to the temporary capital Aden, and the deposit of financial allocations for relief work with the Central Bank in the capital And the transition to the second phase of the relief work, through the implementation of local projects aimed at achieving sustainable local development and enhancing stability in the Yemeni governorates.

He added that the threat of the United Nations organizations to suspend aid in the event of continued Houthi violations against the relief operation is not a solution, and the direct victim of the suspension of aid is the people of Yemen in the unregistered areas and governorates, stressing the importance of applying mechanisms and means provided by the government to stop looting and detention by militias.

The Yemeni Minister of Local Administration renewed his call on UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Marc Lokoc and the international community to adopt a unified stance and firm measures towards the continuation of the Huthi militias in obstructing the work of relief organizations and the looting and detention of aid. And the means by which to stop the looting and the continued detention by the coup militias.

He expressed his deep regret over the international and international disillusion over the continuing terrorist attacks by the coup militias against the relief operation. He wondered what prevents the United Nations from taking a firm stance as long as all the practices of the militia are against all laws, conventions and moral and humanitarian principles. He stressed the need for the United Nations to assume its legal responsibilities And moral in taking firm and urgent positions to prevent the militias from continuing such actions. About a week ago, WFP director David Bisley said the program would suspend some operations in Yemen if there was no progress with Houthi militias in stopping the militias from stealing aid. In an interview with CNN's broadcaster, , Becky Anderson, that there are some Houthi leaders benefit from chaos and war, adding that these are "gangsters and thieves."

Bisley's remarks came after CNN revealed in a special investigation that the Huthis were manipulating international aid, while the United Nations warned Yemen was one step away from the famine because of the war waged by the Huthi militias.

Last week, the World Food Program (WFP) announced that it was considering suspending aid in the areas under the control of the Houthi rebels backed by Iran because of fighting and insecurity and militia involvement. "Humanitarian workers in Yemen can not reach the hungry, Aid convoys are blocked, and the local authorities of the Houthis intervene in the distribution of food. That must stop. "

Earlier this year, the World Food Program issued a report earlier this year calling for an immediate end to Houthi's manipulation of humanitarian relief after discovering evidence and evidence of such practices in Sanaa and other parts of Yemen under militia control. That many of the beneficiaries of the aid did not receive their benefits from rations, and in other areas deprived of the full ration of the hungry, the program also found that local officials of the militias are manipulating during the process of selection of beneficiaries, and fraudulent distribution records, and Sell ​​some aid in the markets of Sanaa, to make gains at the expense of those in need.