Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Drop Yemen's Houthi terrorist label, UN chief to urge US – reports

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US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced plans to designate Yemen's Houthi rebels as a foreign terror group, days ago. Aid groups fear the badge could hamper their work in the war-torn country.

United Nations aid chief Mark Lowcock will urge the United States to reverse its plan to designate Yemen's Houthi group as a foreign terrorist organizati­on, in a planned Thursday briefing to the UN Security Council, seen by news agency Reuters.

The move would push the country into a "famine on a scale that we have not seen for nearly forty years," Lowcock will warn the US.

A US plan to issue licenses and exemptions to aid agencies will not prevent a famine in Yemen, the aid chief will add.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Sunday 11 that he intended to designate the Iran-backed Houthi movement in Yemen as a "foreign terrorist organizati­on."

The designatio­n would provide additional tools to confront terrorist activity and terrorism by the Houthi movement, Pompeo said.

Diplomats and aid groups are concerned such a move could threaten peace talks and hamper efforts to deliver aid to what the UN calls the world's largest humanitari­an crisis.

Who are the Houthis?

The Yemen Houthi movement emerged in the 1980s, forming a broad tribal alliance in Yemen's north based on a revival of Zaydism, a branch of Shia Islam, in opposition to an expanding Salafism.

They were also motivated by what they saw as Saleh's economic discrimina­tion of the north.

They formed a militia in the early 2000's. After various rounds of fighting and the Arab Spring, the Iran-aligned movement took control of Yemen's northern capital Sana in 2014.

Yemen's Saudi-led internatio­nally-recognized government and southern separatist­s have been waging a deadly war with them ever since.

kmm/aw (Reuters)

 ??  ?? A UN aid official is set to urge the US to withdraw its terrorist designatio­n
A UN aid official is set to urge the US to withdraw its terrorist designatio­n

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