Seizure of $200 Mn Fuels Conflict Between Yemen’s Houthi Factions

Houthis during a gathering in Sanaa. (EPA)
Houthis during a gathering in Sanaa. (EPA)
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Seizure of $200 Mn Fuels Conflict Between Yemen’s Houthi Factions

Houthis during a gathering in Sanaa. (EPA)
Houthis during a gathering in Sanaa. (EPA)

Houthi factions have exchanged accusations of corruption, and appropriating public funds and war allocations, well-informed sources in Sanaa told Asharq Al-Awsat.

The first Houthi wing is led by Ahmed Hamid, who is the director of the office of the head of the Revolutionary Ruling Council Mahdi al-Mashat, while the other branch is led by the group's cousin and member of the council, Mohammad Ali al-Houthi.

The sources stated that the recent confrontation between the two wings revolves around two Houthi officials who seized about $200 million.

They stated that the UN-sponsored ceasefire contributed to the escalation of the conflict over fund-raising and that Houthi is now clearly expressing his anger at the absolute power that Hamid enjoys.

Sources claim Hamid controls all of Mashat's decisions, while Houthi is seeking to take over the position and name himself the head of the council.

However, Abdul-Malik al-Houthi opposes the aspirations of his cousin.

- Accusation and dismissal

The sources stated that the Oversight and Accountability Agency, run by the leader Mohammad al-Imad, who is affiliated with the Houthi wing, issued many reports about the corruption of Hamid's faction.

One of the agency's periodic review reports showed that Walid al-Wadaei, head of the Houthi Land Transport Authority, seized about $200 million.

The report and the media campaign that accompanied it prompted Mashat to dismiss Wadaei from his post.

The sources indicated that Wadaei was an employee in the Ministry of Justice and that before the coup, he was an employee in the Seiyun Court of Appeal.

Hamid was appointed to the presidency of the Land Transport Regulatory Authority. He dismissed the Minister of Water, who was close to Houthi, on corruption charges.

Houthi responded to that step, exercised his influence, and pushed for the referral of Wadaei to the Anti-Corruption Commission, prompting his dismissal a month ago.

The sources warned that Hamid will use his influence with the Authority to mitigate the case. They expected the confrontation between the two wings to escalate in the coming days.

- Obstructive corruption reports

Another well-informed source told Asharq Al-Awsat that the Houthi version of the Control and Accounting issued reports revealing corruption cases worth billions of Yemeni riyals.

However, the raging conflict between Hamid and Houthi prevents the reports from being referred to court, as stipulated by Yemeni law, and they are only used in media campaigns to exchange accusations.



Israel Intensifies Attacks against Hezbollah Field Commanders in Lebanon

The Israeli army said it targeted Hezbollah members as they were transferring weapons in the Yohmor area in the South. (NNA)
The Israeli army said it targeted Hezbollah members as they were transferring weapons in the Yohmor area in the South. (NNA)
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Israel Intensifies Attacks against Hezbollah Field Commanders in Lebanon

The Israeli army said it targeted Hezbollah members as they were transferring weapons in the Yohmor area in the South. (NNA)
The Israeli army said it targeted Hezbollah members as they were transferring weapons in the Yohmor area in the South. (NNA)

Six people were killed in Lebanon in the past two days in Israeli strikes against Hezbollah members.

Lebanon’s state news agency said an Israeli drone strike in the country’s south hit a car, killing two people on Thursday afternoon in the village of Baraachit.

The National News Agency gave no further details and it was not immediately clear if the two killed were members of Hezbollah. Israel's military said the strike targeted two members of the party.

Israel had earlier in the day fired artillery at Baraachit.

Also on Thursday, the Israeli army said it targeted Hezbollah members as they were transferring weapons in the Yohmor area in the South.

The NNA said one person was killed overnight on Thursday in an Israeli drone strike on a car in the town of Maaroub in the Tyre region.

Meanwhile, head of Hezbollah’s parliamentary bloc MP Mohammed Raad said the party’s priority at the moment “lies in ending the Israeli occupation, kicking off reconstruction, consolidating sovereignty, achieving the desired reform, and ensuring national partnership.”

“The resistance in Lebanon has and will always be the resistance against occupation and injustice, and against invaders and violators,” he declared.

“The resistance has made major achievements (...) and repelled Israel’s world war against Lebanon in 2006 and defeated it,” he added.

The “support front” Hezbollah had launched in solidarity with Gaza on October 8, 2023, “was a preemptive move aimed at protecting Lebanon, the resistance and its people,” he went on to say.

Moreover, Raad said Hezbollah has been firmly committed to the ceasefire since it went into effect in November “even though it knew that the enemy will not respect it and despite its violations that have been ongoing since day one.”

Furthermore, he stressed that the “resistance was never an alternative to the state in assuming responsibility. Rather, it aided it in protecting Lebanon and forcing the enemy to withdraw” from occupied territories.

The resistance also helped the state “preserve national sovereignty and dignity,” he added.

Now, the new government is prioritizing reform, “and we will help it in achieving that,” remarked Raad.