Gulf News

Activist’s plight shows militia torture machine

YEMEN TO END COOPERATIO­N WITH UN HUMAN RIGHTS MISSION

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AYemeni activist who was tortured for months by Al Houthi rebels this week criticised the UN-backed peace process for his country as “naive”, warning against “humanising” his captors.

Hisham Al Omeisy, who is also a journalist and political commentato­r, was arrested in August 2017 after speaking out against restrictio­ns and corruption in rebel-held areas of the war-ravaged country.

Al Omeisy, who has also harshly criticised the actions of the Saudi-led coalition that has been fighting the rebels since 2015, says the Al Houthis accused him of being an American and Saudi spy.

“I was tortured in prison... They employed barbaric measures,” he told AFP in an interview on the sidelines of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva. He warned that UN officials trying to bring both sides to the table to hammer out a peace deal were being “played by the Al Houthis”.

Al Omeisy was released in January after an internatio­nal campaign to secure his freedom. He lives in Cairo but says he still follows the situation at home.

UN mediator Martin Griffiths tried earlier this month to organise the first negotiatio­ns between Yemen’s warring sides in two years, but the Al Houthis failed to show up in Geneva. ■

Al Omeisy said the rebels refusal to come should not have been a surprise, and questioned whether those trying to broker peace sufficient­ly understand the complexiti­es of the conflict. “The process came off as very naive and overly simplistic,” he said. A major mistake, he said, was trying to “humanise” them.

Al Omeisy said he knew from his time in Al Houthi custody how brutal they were. “They would hang me from the wall, beat me up. I had cuts and bruises all over my body,” he said, displaying scars on his wrists from metal cuffs and a stab-wound on the back of one hand.

He also had pictures of big, red scars on his back and thigh.

His interrogat­ors demanded that he confess on video to being a spy, but Al Omeisy said he refused, pointing out that if he had given in, “I know I would have been executed”.

He said he was held alone in a tiny concrete cell with no light and no toilet, and was often denied food and water.

Meanwhile, Yemen’s government yesterday said it will end its cooperatio­n with a UN human rights mission, accusing investigat­ors of bias after a report on alleged war crimes.

“The government refuses to extend the mission’s mandate because its findings, outlined in the report, did not meet the standards of profession­alism and impartiali­ty or the basic principles of the United Nations,” said a statement carried by the state-run Saba news agency.

 ??  ?? UAE Foreign Minister Shaikh Abdullah Bin Zayed Al Nahyan in a meeting with Yemen’s President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi on the sidelines of the UNGA gathering in New York.
UAE Foreign Minister Shaikh Abdullah Bin Zayed Al Nahyan in a meeting with Yemen’s President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi on the sidelines of the UNGA gathering in New York.

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