Arab News

Yemeni bank reopened after Houthis raid in Sanaa

Last week, Houthi intelligen­ce operatives stormed the main office of Tadhamon Bank in Sanaa

- Saeed Al-Batati Al-Mukalla

A major Yemeni bank on Sunday reopened branches across the country, days after shuttering its operations in the wake of a raid by the Houthis on the bank’s headquarte­r in Sanaa.

Last week, Houthi intelligen­ce operatives stormed the main office of Tadhamon Bank in Sanaa and ordered workers to leave the building before switching off servers and cameras. The operatives seized control of the building for days and stopped operations, forcing the bank to close its branches across Yemen, giving employees leave and barring customers from making withdrawal­s and other transactio­ns. On Thursday, the bank issued a statement saying that it is in contact with the Houthi-controlled central bank for clarificat­ion about the raid, adding that the closure had disrupted the distributi­on of humanitari­an assistance and affected customers’ businesses.

The internatio­nally recognized government of Yemen relocated the headquarte­rs of the central bank to Aden in 2016 to deprive the Houthis of a huge source of finance and have sought to convince Sanaabased banks and mobile operators to move their operations to Aden. Establishe­d in 1996, Tadhamon Bank has 37 branches and more than 700 employees, and is owned by Hayed Saeed Anam Group, a major Yemeni family-owned conglomera­te.

The Houthi central bank said it ordered the raid after finding out that the bank is involved in illegal financial activities such as large speculatio­n on hard currencies and smuggling money abroad.

Private banks and mobile firms have long complained about Houthi harassment and the installing of operatives in their companies to monitor their financial activities, accusing the rebels of fleecing them by imposing high taxes to fund their military activities.

“The Houthi observers have their own office inside all banks and exchange companies in their territorie­s,” an official at a private bank in Yemen told Arab News on Sunday. Despite Houthi raids and charges, local observers and bank officials doubted that Tadhamon Bank or any other major company would move to Aden, given the fact that most of their customers are from the densely populated areas in Houthi-controlled territorie­s. The continuing tension between the government and the pro-independen­ce Southern Transition­al Council that led to sporadic clashes in southern provinces has also discourage­d companies from moving. Another reason for not relocating is the fear of Houthi reprisals. “The bank is afraid of meeting the fate of Sabafon,” an employee at Tadhamon Bank said, referring to a major Yemeni mobile operator that relocated its main offices and operations from Houthi-held Sanaa to Aden in September. The Houthis punished Sabafon by banning other companies and landlines from calling its subscriber­s and cutting off internet services. The Houthis reopened the company in Sanaa after seizing control of the companies’ servers and computers and issued new SIM cards.

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