Yemen.. Assurances of supreme movements to confront militia attacks

Sources close to the Yemeni government confirmed the existence of movements at the highest levels to confront the escalation of the Houthi militia, and warned of a complete collapse of the humanitarian truce and a return to military operations.

She indicated that there are military movements in cooperation and joint coordination with the Arab Coalition to Support Legitimacy, and logistical support from the international forces present in the international waters in the Gulf of Aden, to protect international shipping routes off the Yemeni coast, and to protect oil facilities and ports from attacks by the Houthi militia.

She explained that the Presidential Leadership Council and the Yemeni government are in an almost daily meeting to confront the repercussions of the Houthi attacks on oil facilities and ports in Hadramout and Shabwa, and their escalation with missiles and marches against civilians on the fronts of Marib and Taiz.

While the sources warned of a complete collapse of the humanitarian truce sponsored by the United Nations in Yemen, and the militias refused to extend it in early October, against the background of the recent attacks, the militias continued their threat to continue bombing ports and oil ships, and navigation in the waters of the Red and Arabian Bahrain.

This time, the militias' threat came from Abdul Aziz bin Habtoor, the head of the so-called internationally unrecognized Sana'a government, who said that the attacks that targeted oil facilities and ports in Hadramout and Shabwa are only the beginning of a combat operation in Yemeni waters.

This coincides with warnings issued by the Yemeni Presidential Leadership Council, that the Houthi terrorist attacks on oil ports and installations will have serious effects, foremost of which is the potential salary crisis and food security across Yemen, which threatens with catastrophic repercussions, and the collapse of all efforts to avert the specter of famine.

In a virtual meeting chaired by Council President Rashad Al-Alimi, the Council affirmed that the Houthi attacks do not threaten the situation in Yemen, but rather pose a threat to the stability of the region, energy supplies, freedom of global trade, and international peace and security.

According to the official Saba agency, the council approved a number of measures to neutralize and limit the repercussions of the Houthi attacks, and directed the government with a chronic implementation plan at various levels to confront these repercussions.

He called on "the international community to assume its responsibilities in the face of this dangerous terrorist threat that the Houthi militia and its supporters boast of in a war crime that requires firm punishment by designating it as an international terrorist group."

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