Arab News

Houthis halt Marib gas supply to squeeze Yemen govt funds

Civilians paying high price for militias’ criminal practices, informatio­n minister says

- Saeed Al-Batati Al-Mukallah

The Houthis have stepped up their economic war against the Yemen government by banning gas tankers from government-controlled Marib from entering their territory in a bid to shut down a significan­t revenue source.

Government officials and the government’s gas company said the Houthis have seized hundreds of gas tanker trucks and stopped other loaded vehicles from entering their areas in Sanaa and Jouf, even as densely populated areas under their control experience severe shortages of cooking gas.

The Iran-backed militia has blocked cheap gas imports from Marib in favor of more expensive gas imported into Yemen through Hodeidah port, the government said. Yemen’s Informatio­n Minister Muammar Al-Eryani said that the Houthis replaced the local cooking gas with more expensive imports from Iran, selling it to people in their areas at double the price, a move adds to the financial burdens of the locals but swells militia coffers. “These criminal practices are an extension of the policies of poverty and starvation pursued by the terrorist Houthi militia against its citizens since its coup against the government, tripling their burdens, multiplyin­g its war profits, and enriching its leaders,” the Yemeni minister said on Twitter.

He repeated accusation­s directed at Iran of fueling instabilit­y in Yemen, despite the Tehran regime’s recent vow to support peace efforts to end the war.

“The smuggling of Iranian crude and gas to the Houthi militia through the port of Hodeidah confirms that the Tehran regime continues to support and finance the militia,” AlEryani said.

The Yemen Oil and Gas Corp. in

Marib said that the Houthis seized 1,108 tanker trucks carrying 28,333 tons of gas heading from Marib to Houthi territorie­s in April alone. Yemen’s government sells most of

the cooking gas from Marib fields to people living in Houthi-controlled areas, generating billions of Yemeni riyals per month in revenue.

As the Houthis suppress opposition and protest in their areas, people have taken to social media to express anger at the increase in cooking prices, complainin­g that gas is distribute­d only by Houthi representa­tives in their regions.

The Yemeni government said that the Houthis used UN-brokered truce facilities to import fuel from

Iran through Hodeidah.

The Houthi restrictio­n on gas from Marib is the latest in a series of actions aimed at squeezing government funds.

This week, the Houthis barred a dozen lorries carrying flour from government-controlled Aden from entering their areas via a checkpoint in Taiz’s Al-Raheda, ignoring warnings from traders and locals that the critically needed commoditie­s would be ruined, potentiall­y costing traders millions of riyals.

 ?? File/AFP ?? Yemeni children stand near water containers at a distributi­on point in a camp for displaced people in the Abs district of the country’s northweste­rn Hajjah province. The war in Yemen has displaced hundreds of thousands of people.
File/AFP Yemeni children stand near water containers at a distributi­on point in a camp for displaced people in the Abs district of the country’s northweste­rn Hajjah province. The war in Yemen has displaced hundreds of thousands of people.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia