Houthis Escalate Suppression Against Women

Child standing next to Houthi women in Sanaa at an armed gathering (Reuters)
Child standing next to Houthi women in Sanaa at an armed gathering (Reuters)
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Houthis Escalate Suppression Against Women

Child standing next to Houthi women in Sanaa at an armed gathering (Reuters)
Child standing next to Houthi women in Sanaa at an armed gathering (Reuters)

The Houthi militia increased its suppression against women in Sanaa, and other areas under its control, amid several accusations of local and international parties accusing the group of escalating its repressive campaigns and committing numerous attacks against Yemenis.

The Yemeni Network for Rights and Freedoms revealed in a recent report that Houthis kidnapped more than 380 Yemeni women between September 2014 and August 2022.

The Network said that more than 4,201 civilians abducted, including women, are still held by the group without any information on their conditions, adding that of the 1,317 Yemenis who forcibly disappeared, 85 are women.

It explained that the abductees are transferred blindfolded so they cannot know or identify their locations.

The report revealed that the Zeinabeyyat brigade, the women's military group, committed more than 1,444 incidents of abuse against men and women between December 2017 and October 2022, including arbitrary arrests and detention, looting, sexual assault, beatings, and torture.

Houthis also pursued Yemeni activists, attacked sit-ins, and deployed Zeinabeyyat members at checkpoints of several cities under its control.

The Brigade was involved in the death of nine women, six of whom were killed due to severe beatings, and three were directly shot.

During the same period, the Network documented 172 violations against civilians, carrying out 31 raids on service and health facilities, 76 searches in several educational institutions, and 65 attacks on houses of worship and Quran memorization centers.

According to the report, the group kidnapped about 571 women and detained 231 in its prisons, supervised by Zeinabeyyat, and pointed out that the Brigade recruited more than 4,000 new members trained in combat.

Meanwhile, the American Center for Justice (ACJ) revealed that abductees in Yemen were raped and forced into prostitution in prisons.

In a statement coinciding with the International Day For Elimination Of Violence Against Women, the Center declared its full solidarity with victims of gender-based violence. It also called on the international community to take serious action to eliminate violence against women and girls and work to stop the wars and conflicts that exacerbate these violations.

Human rights activists in Sanaa accused the group of detaining women activists, torturing them, and charging them with prostitution and others, hoping it would deny them social support.



Three Algerians Charged in Kidnapping of Opposition Figure in France

Amir Boukhors (social media)
Amir Boukhors (social media)
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Three Algerians Charged in Kidnapping of Opposition Figure in France

Amir Boukhors (social media)
Amir Boukhors (social media)

Three men, including an employee at the Algerian consulate in France, were indicted in Paris on suspicion of involvement in the April 2024 kidnapping of Amir Boukhors, an opponent of the Algerian regime, judicial sources told AFP on Saturday.

The three men were charged Friday in Paris with kidnapping and unlawful detention in relation to a terrorist organization, as well as participation in a criminal terrorist conspiracy, according to the National Anti-Terrorism Prosecutor’s Office (PNAT).

Later, a French judge ruled that all three be placed in pre-trial detention.

One of the suspects works for an Algerian consulate in France. While he holds a service passport rather than a diplomatic one, the issue of diplomatic immunity is expected to be addressed during the proceedings, a source close to the case told AFP.

Boukhors, a well-known critic of the Algerian regime, had previously survived two serious attacks — one in 2022 and another on the evening of April 29, 2024, according to his lawyer, Eric Plouvier.

The kidnapping, which initially fell under the jurisdiction of the Créteil prosecutor’s office, was later taken over by PNAT in February 2025.

“This shift to an anti-terror investigation shows that a foreign power, Algeria, did not hesitate to carry out violent acts on French soil — acts of intimidation and terror that threaten lives,” Plouvier said, calling the case a “state affair.”

Neither of the suspects’ attorneys responded to AFP requests for comment.

Boukhors’ name also surfaced in a separate probe by the Paris prosecutor’s office.

In that case, a French Economy Ministry employee was indicted in December for allegedly providing confidential information about Algerian dissidents — including Boukhors — to an Algerian national working at the Algerian consulate in Créteil.

According to sources, some of the individuals targeted in that investigation later became victims of violence, death threats, or abduction attempts.

The latest developments between the two countries coincided with the statements of French President Emmanuel Macron, who said last Friday he is “confident” on the release of French-Algerian writer Boualem Sansal, sentenced to five years in prison in Algeria.

Sansal’s case is under “special attention” by Algerian authorities, Macron commented during a visit to the Paris Book Festival, adding that the evolution of the case makes him confident that the writer would soon be released.

“I am confident because I know that there is particular attention. I am simply waiting for the results,” Macron said.

He added, “Our strongest wish is for the Algerian authorities to make the decision that will allow him to regain his freedom, receive treatment, and return to writing.”

Observers believe that the decision to charge the three Algerian men in France would disrupt the fresh efforts to revive bilateral relations between Paris and Algiers, particularly following the March 31 phone call between Macron and Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune, who voiced their willingness to repair relations and after French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot said last week that ties with Algeria were back to normal.