Arab News

UN’s ‘credibilit­y at risk’ with one-sided Yemen reports

By ignoring crimes being committed by Houthis in Yemen, the world body has exposed its bias, say experts

- SIRAJ WAHAB

“The problem is simple: The Houthis form only 2 to 3 percent of the Yemeni population, and yet these Iranian-supported militias are holding the entire country hostage at the point of a gun,” Dr. Hamdan Al-Shehri, a Riyadhbase­d Saudi political analyst and internatio­nal relations scholar, told Arab News.

“The UN and the world community have become silent spectators to the crimes being committed by the Houthis and the mercenarie­s of (ousted President) Ali Abdullah Saleh,” he said.

He reminded the UN that Resolution 2216 is very clear. “It calls for three specific things: That Houthis should end the illegitima­te occupation of Sanaa and other cities and return to where they came from; that they should hand over their weapons; and that they should become part of the political solution,” said Al-Shehri.

None of these conditions have been met, he said. “And the only countries trying to enforce the UN mandate are the Arab countries led by Saudi Arabia. And it is the Arab coalition that is being blamed by the UN.

“The UN and the world community have become silent spectators,” he said, pointing out that the Houthis have waged war against the Yemeni state six times in the past. “That is a criminal record in itself.”

He blamed the human rights organizati­ons affiliated to the UN for overlookin­g basic facts: “The Houthis are the aggressors. They have been armed by Iran. The situation in Houthi-occupied areas is dire. The Houthis have forced children into the fighting. They are using extortion because they hold all the levers of power. There is no way to find out the atrocities that they have committed in areas under their rule because those areas are inaccessib­le to UN personnel and human rights organizati­ons.”

Al-Shehri said it was a travesty that the UN was depending on reports written by the Houthis themselves. “How can the UN and its affiliate bodies rely on one-sided reports? This defies logic; it is unfathomab­le. The UN should depend on informatio­n provided by the legitimate and internatio­nally recognized government of Yemen,” he said.

The UN was establishe­d primarily to support peace and security but the general perception is that since its inception, it has failed to make any positive breakthrou­ghs on Arab and Islamic issues and even on some internatio­nal conflicts.

“It plays the role of spectator and also plays a major role in breaking the rules and standards for which it was establishe­d,” said Al-Shehri.

When António Guterres took over as secretary-general, the UN witnessed a decline, and the organizati­on became a hostage to false propaganda, said one veteran observer.

“The performanc­e and effectiven­ess of the UN since Guterres assumed his duties has become weak and shaky and shown an inability to restore the prestige of the UN,” he said. “Guterres plunged the UN into a state of confusion and defeatism because of his failures in addressing a number of issues, first and foremost the Yemeni crisis on the basis of UN Resolution 2216, which adopted the Gulf initiative and the outcome of Yemeni National Dialogue as references in order to resolve the crisis.”

According to him, the Yemenis have been suspicious of the UN since the “flounderin­g performanc­e” of its Yemeni envoy, Jamal Benomar, who was succeeded by Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed who interacted behind the scenes with the Houthi militias and the mercenarie­s of Ali Abdullah Saleh.

“When the Kingdom moved toward supporting the internatio­nally recognized legitimate government in Yemen through Operation Decisive Storm and Operation Restoring Hope, that was in response to the official request by the legitimate government of Yemen, which enjoys the support of the UN in accordance with Resolution 2216,” he said.

He said the UN kept ignoring the legitimate government in Yemen and showed no interest in the areas under the control of the Yemeni government. In fact, the UN has not carried out any visits to Aden. “On the other hand, UN officials continued dealing effectivel­y and continuous­ly with the coup plotters and cooperated with their institutio­ns in the delivery of assistance; cooperatio­n was included with the Yemeni Ministry of Education, a subsidiary of the Houthi militias and Saleh,” he said.

He said reports of the human rights organizati­ons did not deal specifical­ly with the problems and dangers of land mines, the recruitmen­t of children, checkpoint­s that hinder the passage of aid, the protection of unarmed civilians, the bombing of the houses of individual­s opposing the Houthis and Saleh, the arrests of journalist­s and violations in Sanaa prisons, especially the central prison, and the presence of militias in hospitals and schools.

“The criteria adopted by other non-UN organizati­ons such as Doctors Without Borders and the Red Cross are more transparen­t than those of the UN-affiliated nongovernm­ental organizati­ons (NGOs),” said the observer.

He pointed out that the UN was contractin­g with transport companies belonging to the pro-coup traders in Sanaa and the dispatch of humanitari­an aid without the presence of internatio­nal observers resulting in the lack of confirmati­on of delivery plus silence on Houthi violations out of fear that the UN representa­tives would be expelled from Sanaa.

JEDDAH: The UN is rapidly losing its credibilit­y because of what experts say are its one-sided and questionab­le reports on the situation in Yemen.

 ??  ?? KSRelief officials distribute aid packets among the needy in Yemen. (SPA)
KSRelief officials distribute aid packets among the needy in Yemen. (SPA)

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