Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Torture said to be rife in Yemen prisons

- MAGGIE MICHAEL

MARIB, Yemen — Farouk Baakar’s mistake was taking a selfie.

The Yemeni medic was on duty at al-Rashid hospital on the day when a bleeding man was brought into the emergency room with gunshot wounds and signs of torture. He had been dumped on the side of a highway after being held in a prison run by the Houthi militiamen who control northern Yemen. He’d been whipped across the back and hung by his wrists for days.

Baakar spent hours removing bullets and repairing ruptured intestines. He tended to the patient’s recovery for 80 days and, at the end, agreed to pose for a selfie with him.

Weeks later, Houthi security officials grabbed the man again. They searched his phone and found the photo.

Militiamen stormed the hospital in the port city of Hodeida, blindfolde­d Baakar and hustled him away in a pickup. Because he’d given medical help to an enemy of the Houthis, they told him, he was now their enemy too. After his arrest in mid-2016, he spent 18 months imprisoned. During that time, he says, they burned him, beat him and chained him to the ceiling by his wrists.

Baakar and his patient are among thousands imprisoned by Houthi rebels during Yemen’s four-year civil war. Many of them, an Associated Press investigat­ion found, suffered extreme torture — smashed in their faces with batons, hung by their wrists or genitals for weeks at a time or scorched with acid.

The AP spoke with 23 people who said they survived or witnessed torture in Houthi detention sites, as well as with eight relatives of detainees, five lawyers and rights activists, and three security officers involved in previous prisoner swaps who said they saw marks of torture on inmates.

These accounts underscore the significan­ce of an agreement on a prisoner swap reached in Sweden on Thursday at the start of U.N.-sponsored peace talks between Yemen’s Shiite Houthi rebels and the Yemeni government, backed by Saudi Arabia and the United States. As a trust-building measure, the two sides agreed to release several thousand prisoners, though details still must be hammered out.

The Abductees’ Mothers Union, an associatio­n of female relatives of detainees jailed by the Houthis, has documented more than 18,000 detainees in the last four years, including 1,000 cases of torture in a network of secret prisons, according to Sabah Mohammed, a representa­tive of the group in the city of Marib.

The mothers’ group says at least 126 prisoners have died from torture since the Houthis took over the capital, Sanaa, in late 2014.

Amnesty Internatio­nal says that “horrific human rights abuses, as well as war crimes, are being committed throughout the country by all parties to the conflict.”

Internatio­nal outrage over the bloodshed in Yemen has largely focused on abuses carried out by the U.S.-backed and Saudi-led military coalition fighting on the side of the Yemeni government.

Houthi leaders previously have denied they engage in torture, though they did not respond to repeated AP requests for comment in recent weeks. The Houthis’ Human Rights Ministry said in late 2016 that “there is no policy or systematic use of torture on prisoners.”

But within the movement, a moderate faction has acknowledg­ed abuses and sought to end them. Yahia al-Houthi, the brother of the group’s top leader, set up a committee in 2016 to investigat­e reports of torture. It helped free 13,500 prisoners in its first three months.

The committee sent a video report to the leader, Abdel-Malek al-Houthi, showing scenes of overcrowde­d prison wards along with testimony from senior Houthis on the committee who said they saw signs of torture. The video was not made public, but the AP obtained a copy.

“What we saw would make you cry tears of blood,” one committee member says in the video.

Abdel-Malek never responded to the video. Instead, hard-line security officials shut down the committee and briefly detained two of its members.

The video report echoes the accounts victims gave to the AP.

Baakar, who was freed in December 2017 after his family paid the equivalent of $8,000, said that after his arrest, the militiamen hung him from the ceiling, stripped him, whipped his naked body, then pulled out his nails and tore out his hair. He fainted. Once they brought plastic bottles and with a lighter melted the plastic over his head, back, and between his thighs.

Other tortured detainees asked for his help. He tried to treat their injuries, even carrying out simple surgeries, without anesthesia and using electric wires, the only tool he had.

“When I asked Houthi guards for help, saying the man is dying, their only answer was: ‘Let him die.’”

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