"Yemeni legitimacy" is preparing 6 brigades to complete the liberation of Marib and Al-Bayda

Yemeni military sources confirmed that six military brigades were fully equipped in cooperation with the Arab coalition forces, to complete the liberation of Marib and Al-Bayda, noting that the new forces are awaiting orders to participate in the battles against the terrorist Houthi militia.

The sources expected that those forces with qualitative training and armament would be involved in the fight against the Houthis, if the calls for talks between the Yemeni parties that were set by the Gulf Cooperation Council at the end of March in the Saudi capital, Riyadh, failed.

The sources pointed out that the situation of the battles and the participation of new forces in them depends on the militias' continuing escalation and rejection of peace, and that the next stage will be decisive and has other options.

The sources pointed out that the militias lost all their combat options, after their failure to withstand the forces participating in the liberation of Shabwa and southern Marib at the beginning of this year, as well as their inability to maneuver in the battles of Marib and Hajjah, which is an indication of their weakness and inability to mobilize more fighters. This was embodied in the tribes' rejection of their calls to mobilize fighters.

And the Yemeni legitimate forces, during the past hours, continued to carry out qualitative combat operations that led to the liberation of several sites south of Marib, after their success in luring the militias towards the open areas in the Ramli axis, and inflicted heavy losses on them.

Field sources confirmed that the militias suffered heavy losses in their equipment and equipment, as a result of the operations of the army and tribes, and the raids of focused coalition fighters, which led to the destruction of Houthi combat mechanisms that recently pushed them to southern Marib.

The coalition fighters also targeted Houthi combat sites and mechanisms on the fronts south and west of Marib, which led to the deaths and injuries of militia members.

In Hajjah, the army and resistance forces, with the support of the coalition fighters, thwarted an attempt to advance by the militias towards the village of Al-Dhahr and Al-Akashiah in the liberated Hiran district, north of the province, inflicting heavy losses on it, as well as failing to advance towards the Al-Husnain area in the vicinity of the city of Haradh.

And field sources reported that the militias have retreated to their previous positions, as they are working to restore the ranks of their members and bring in more reinforcements to launch other attacks towards the liberated areas in the districts of Haradh, Hiran, Abs and Mastaba, after their failure during the past two weeks to achieve any progress.

The sources indicated that the militias sustained 1,700 deaths on the fronts north of Hajjah during that period, while 200 army forces and resistance men were martyred.

The militias have buried 114 of their dead who were killed in Marib and Hajjah since the beginning of this March, including prominent field leaders, including a major general, three brigadier generals, seven colonels, 17 lieutenants, 20 majors, 11 captains, 26 lieutenants, and 28 non-commissioned officers.

In Saada, field sources confirmed the killing of six Houthi militants, including four African mercenaries, in shelling by the army that targeted a Houthi site in the Munabbih district.

In Al-Jawf, the militias continued to send reinforcements and combat mechanisms, for the sixth consecutive day, to the governorate from Sanaa, including ballistic missiles, drones and mobile missile launchers.

In Al-Dhalea, the artillery of the joint and southern forces demolished Houthi sites in the town of Habeel Yahya, northeast of Al-Hasha District, which led to the death and injury of a number of Houthis, and the destruction of fortifications and combat mechanisms that were in the targeted sites.

In Amran, north of Sanaa, the Rida area, north of the governorate, witnessed Houthi-Houthi clashes, between the elements of the Houthi leader, Ahmed Naji Ayyash, from the sons of Amran, and the elements of the Houthi leader, "Abu Jaafar" from Saada, against the background of sharing royalties imposed on the traders of the region's market.

As part of the violations, the militias cut off the tongue of a woman in front of her husband and children in Sanaa, against the background of her protest against the crisis of oil derivatives and household gas that has been going on for more than a month in Sanaa.

Local residents in the city stated that Houthi elements on board three Houthi combat vehicles stormed the woman's house in the center of the city, tied her husband and children and cut off her tongue, as punishment for her protest and insulting the instigators of the oil and gas crisis in the city.

The militias had fabricated an oil and domestic gas crisis for more than a month, and prevented locomotives of oil derivatives from entering Sanaa. They took advantage of the crisis to barter families in exchange for gas or oil in exchange for sending fighters to the fronts, and used the crisis as a means to punish tribes and people after they rejected the recent Houthi calls for mobilization.

In Al-Mahwit, west of Sanaa, the militias committed a heinous crime against an eleven-year-old child, because he was wearing a T-shirt bearing the image of Saudi King Salman. They beat and abused her until he died.

At Sana’a University, the militias appointed one of its members, Ali Sharaf al-Din, to the position of “Associate Professor,” and he had not graduated for eight years, in violation of the university’s regulations and laws that allow the granting of this degree and position after 13 years of graduating and obtaining a doctorate degree. As well as submitting three published researches, which Sharaf Al-Din did not do.

In Sana'a also, local sources reported the disappearance of eight people, including a child and two girls, since the beginning of this year, in mysterious circumstances, noting that the disappearance of two students from Taher Al-Saifi School in Al-Safi District last Wednesday.

While a mother and her child disappeared last week, preceded by the disappearance of a child, a man, a girl and a young man, in January and February.

On the other hand, the militias prevented the use of the “Starlink” Internet, as the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology, under its control, announced the ban on the import, circulation and use of satellite Internet devices of the “Starlink” type, or any other company that provides satellite Internet services, threatening users or vendors. It has legal accountability and prosecution, as part of its approach to restricting freedoms in the areas under its control.

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