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US brands Yemen’s Huthis as terrorists
Published on: Tuesday, January 12, 2021
Published on: Tue, Jan 12, 2021
By: AFP
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US brands Yemen’s Huthis as terrorists
A Yemeni man holds up pictures of Huthi rebel leader Abdul Malik al-Huthi (left) and chief of the Shiite Muslim movement Hezbollah Hassan Nasrallah. (AFP)
WASHINGTON: US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has moved to brand Yemen’s Iranian-linked Huthi rebels as terrorists, a last-minute move in defiance of aid groups who fear it will worsen a humanitarian crisis.

Unless Congress blocks the decision, the Huthis will be blacklisted on January 19 — one day before the inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden, whose aides had hoped to mount a fresh push to end Yemen’s devastating six-year-old war.

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Pompeo’s action could complicate Biden’s promised efforts to restart diplomacy with Iran and to reassess the US alliance with Saudi Arabia, which has led a bloody offensive in its impoverished southern neighbour.

“The designations are intended to hold Ansar Allah accountable for its terrorist acts, including cross-border attacks threatening civilian populations, infrastructure and commercial shipping,” Pompeo said in a statement late Sunday, using the official name of the Huthi movement.

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The Huthis have “led a brutal campaign that has killed many people, continues to destabilise the region and denies Yemenis a peaceful solution to the conflict in their country,” he added.

Pompeo also designated as terrorists three leaders of the movement, including their chief Abdul Malik al-Huthi.

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He pointed to a December 30 attack on an airport in Yemen’s second city Aden, which killed 26 people and was blamed by the Saudi-backed government on the Huthis.

The rebel group controls much of Yemen, including the capital Sanaa, and is already under US sanctions.
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But a designation as a terrorist group is expected to scare away outside actors from many transactions with Huthi authorities, including bank transfers and buying food and fuel, for fear of US prosecution.

Aid groups have warned Pompeo against the blacklisting of the Huthis, saying that they have no option but to deal with what is the de facto government in northern Yemen.

“We must be able to negotiate access for our aid and protection of civilians with all sides to all conflicts. Our humanitarian work must not be criminalised,” Jan Egeland, secretary general of the Norwegian Refugee Council, said in November. Pompeo insisted that the State Department was aware of the concerns and would work with non-governmental groups and the United Nations to ensure that aid goes through.

“We are planning to put in place measures to reduce their impact on certain humanitarian activity and imports into Yemen,” Pompeo said.

President Donald Trump’s administration has been ramping up pressure on Iran in its final days, hoping to make it more difficult logistically and politically for Biden to ease sanctions as he seeks a return to a nuclear agreement.

US officials and analysts say that Iran has armed the Huthis, with which the Shiite clerical state has religious kinship, but some experts question the extent of cooperation and see Tehran primarily as interested in bogging down Saudi Arabia, whose brutal air campaign has included strikes on civilian targets. 
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