Houthis Implement New Method to Monitor, Suppress Residents

Houthi supporters attend a rally in Sanaa, Yemen (file photo: Reuters)
Houthi supporters attend a rally in Sanaa, Yemen (file photo: Reuters)
TT
20

Houthis Implement New Method to Monitor, Suppress Residents

Houthi supporters attend a rally in Sanaa, Yemen (file photo: Reuters)
Houthi supporters attend a rally in Sanaa, Yemen (file photo: Reuters)

Houthi leaders in Sanaa established a new security formation named "community committees" to monitor the population and repress personal freedoms.

According to militia media sources, the group's leaders in Sanaa held several meetings with residential and neighborhood supervisors and officials in ten districts.

They formed the so-called "community committees," which include four to five committees in each directorate to supervise campaigns of repression and restrictions on freedoms.

According to the Houthi Saba Agency, leader Khaled al-Madani urged members of local councils, authorities, and directors of security departments to provide all facilities and support to the committees to ensure the success of the "soft war."

Madani, the supervisor in charge of Sanaa, said that the program would include closing stores that display advertisements with women and tightening control over cafes, restaurants, parks, institutes, and universities to prevent mixing between the genders.

The coup leader considered the campaigns against Sanaa residents as part of the group's inauguration of the program's second phase to boost the "faith march."

- Intensive mobilization activities

Well-informed sources in Sanaa told Asharq Al-Awsat that the Houthi militias are preparing about 5,000 workshops, events, and lectures targeting students in the primary and secondary stages.

The group launched the first phase of the same program targeting students of public and private schools in Sanaa under the supervision of its members in education, youth, and endowments.

The sources pointed out that the first stage witnessed more than 1,000 workshops and sectarian activities that targeted young people and children in all schools and orphanages in Sanaa and its countryside.

Yemenis are increasingly concerned about hardline Houthi ideologies and practices, and Sanaa residents fear that these violations will turn Yemen into a prison where the group imposes its ideas.

The residents of several areas under Houthi control previously complained to Asharq Al-Awsat about the militias' restrictions on their freedoms, noting that they introduce a new fad each time to tighten the measures more.

B.W., an employee in the education sector, told Asharq Al-Awsat that the militias are not much different from what extremist terrorist groups do.

- Abusive campaigns

During the past year, the Houthi militia launched campaigns against residents in its areas as part of its repressive and extremist measures.

They targeted women working in aid organizations, preventing activities that include mixing between males and females participate.

They also halted weddings and university graduation ceremonies because they encouraged mixing between genders.

The militants launched a campaign targeting women's clothing stores in Sanaa early last year, claiming they violated "faith values."

Owners of clothing stores complained about the return of Houthi raids, and some of them confirmed to Asharq Al-Awsat that the incursions were sudden, as if they were raiding drug dens and not shops selling clothes.

They pointed out that the group ordered several shop owners to pay sums, while many were forced to pledge not to use the display models and mannequins again.



Without Meat, Families in Gaza Struggle to Celebrate Eid Al-Adha Holiday

Displaced Palestinians walk along a road to receive humanitarian aid packages from a US-backed foundation in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on June 5, 2025. (Photo by AFP)
Displaced Palestinians walk along a road to receive humanitarian aid packages from a US-backed foundation in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on June 5, 2025. (Photo by AFP)
TT
20

Without Meat, Families in Gaza Struggle to Celebrate Eid Al-Adha Holiday

Displaced Palestinians walk along a road to receive humanitarian aid packages from a US-backed foundation in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on June 5, 2025. (Photo by AFP)
Displaced Palestinians walk along a road to receive humanitarian aid packages from a US-backed foundation in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on June 5, 2025. (Photo by AFP)

With the Gaza Strip devastated by war and siege, Palestinians struggled Thursday to celebrate one of the most important Islamic holidays.

To mark Eid al-Adha — Arabic for the Festival of Sacrifice — Muslims traditionally slaughter a sheep or cow and give away part of the meat to the poor as an act of charity. Then they have a big family meal with sweets. Children get gifts of new clothes.

But no fresh meat has entered Gaza for three months. Israel has blocked shipments of food and other aid to pressure Hamas to release hostages taken in the Oct. 7, 2023, attack that started the war. And nearly all the territory’s homegrown sheep, cattle and goats are dead after 20 months of Israeli bombardment and ground offensives, said The Associated Press.

Some of the little livestock left was on sale at a makeshift pen set up in the vast tent camp of Muwasi in the southern part of Gaza’s Mediterranean coast.

But no one could afford to buy. A few people came to look at the sheep and goats, along with a cow and a camel. Some kids laughed watching the animals and called out the prayers connected to the holiday.

“I can’t even buy bread. No meat, no vegetables,” said Abdel Rahman Madi. “The prices are astronomical.”

But prices for everything have soared amid the blockade, which was only slightly eased two weeks ago. Meat and most fresh fruits and vegetables disappeared from the markets weeks ago.

At a street market in the nearby city of Khan Younis, some stalls had stuffed sheep toys and other holiday knickknacks and old clothes. But most people left without buying any gifts after seeing the prices.

“Before, there was an Eid atmosphere, the children were happy ... Now with the blockade, there’s no flour, no clothes, no joy,” said Hala Abu Nqeira, a woman looking through the market. “We just go to find flour for our children. We go out every day looking for flour at a reasonable price, but we find it at unbelievable prices.”

Israel’s campaign against Hamas has almost entirely destroyed Gaza’s ability to feed itself. The UN says 96% of the livestock and 99% of the poultry are dead. More than 95% of Gaza’s prewar cropland is unusable, either too damaged or inaccessible inside Israeli military zones, according to a land survey published this week by the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization.

Israel barred all food and other supplies from entering Gaza for more than two months.

It eased the blockade two weeks ago to allow a trickle of aid trucks in for the UN to distribute. The trucks have brought in some food items, mainly flour. But the UN says it has struggled to delivery much of the incoming aid because of looting or Israeli military restrictions.

Almost the entire population of more than 2 million people have been driven from their homes, and most have had to move multiple times to escape Israeli offensives.

Rasha Abu Souleyma said she recently slipped back to her home in Rafah — from which her family had fled to take refuge in Khan Younis — to find some possessions she’d left behind.

She came back with some clothes, pink plastic sunglasses and bracelets that she gave to her two daughters as Eid gifts.

“I can’t buy them clothes or anything,” the 38-year-old said. “I used to bring meat in Eid so they would be happy, but now we can’t bring meat, and I can’t even feed the girls with bread.”

Near her, a group of children played on makeshift swings made of knotted and looped ropes.

Karima Nejelli, a displaced woman from Rafah, pointed out that people in Gaza had now marked both Eid al-Adha and the other main Islamic holiday, Eid al-Fitr, two times each under the war. “During these four Eids, we as Palestinians did not see any kind of joy, no sacrifice, no cookies, no buying Eid clothes or anything.”