Houthi militias stepped up their transgressions on Yemeni national Republic values in hopes of widening the sectarian divide and further endorsing Iranian propaganda locally.
Most speeches given by Houthi leaders not only revolve around historical grudges, but also claim a selective divination befalling the coupist leader Abdul-Malik Badreddin al-Houthi’s lineage.
Houthis have systematically targeted government institutions, starting off with a sectarian-inspired rebranding of state establishments. They also went on to modify academic curricula administered in both public and private schools in their areas of control. The introduced curricula chiefly promote Iranian Khomeini ideology.
Even more, Houthi militias worked extensively to place its elements in government and civil society jobs.
They also restricted general freedoms through issuing Takfiri fatwas (self-proclaimed religious rulings which broaden the definition of apostates and terms of their punishment) and conducting strict crackdowns on entertainment and commercial establishments.
Houthis’ ideology imposed fixed school uniforms and heavily regulated and tailored public events.
Houthis rebranded a Hodeidah hospital which was named after a historical figure which revolted in defense of the Yemeni republic against the Mutawakkilite Kingdom’s Imam Ahmad bin Yahya Hamididdin.
"Al-Shaheed Alafi Hospital" (Arabic for the Martyr Alafi Hospital) was renamed as the “West Coast Medical Teaching Hospital.”
Such a move comes in the course of unrelenting efforts to obliterate the Yemeni national identity and instill instead an Iranian-styled state.
Alafi is one of the Republic defenders which were executed by the Hamididdin regime after being involved in an attempt to assassinate the latter in 1961, a year before the 1962 revolution.
The North Yemen Civil War was fought in North Yemen from 1962 to 1970 between royalist partisans of the Mutawakkilite Kingdom and supporters of the Yemen Arab Republic.
Three months ago, Houthis unearthed a memorial set up for an unidentified soldier in Sanaa and turned it into a grave for one of the coup’s leaders, Saleh Ali al-Sammad, in an attempt to avenge the Republican monument and transform it into a sectarian shrine.
Houthis also paid homage to their late leader by naming an "Educational Complex" in the University of Ibb after him, as well as a score of hospitals and schools in Sanaa.
Going after national monuments and institutions is strongly believed to be a part of the Iran-backed militia’s agenda for the indoctrination of Yemenis.
In Ibb province, another hospital initially named in commemoration of the first-ever Yemeni revolution in the 20th century in 1948, was renamed after the Houthi icon, Sammad.
Houthis have also prepared a list including dozens of schools that will have their names changed in the future to better fit Houthi-encouraged sectarianism, sources told Asharq Al-Awsat.