Gulf News

Al Houthi’s terror label will empower UN

Latest decision by the US is the right move at the right time for Yemen

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Finally, the United States has taken the right decision to classify Yemen’s rebel militias, Al Houthis, as a foreign terrorist organisati­on following the escalation by the Iran- sponsored group of its attacks on Saudi civilian border areas and on oil tankers in the Red Sea.

The designatio­ns are intended to the terror group “accountabl­e for its terrorist acts, including cross- border attacks threatenin­g civilian population­s, infrastruc­ture, and commercial shipping,” Secretary of State Michael Pompeo said in a statement. Washington also plans to designate three of the group’s leaders, Abdul Malik Al Houthi, Abd Al Khaliq Badr Al Din Al Houthi, and Abdullah Yahya Al Hakim, as “Specially Designated Global Terrorists.”

A senior State Department official noted that the decision was based on the group’s involvemen­t in terrorist activities, including a missile attackona Saudi airport in2019 and another on a Saudi oil distributi­on station in 2020.

Trump administra­tion had been mulling this decision for some time but it apparently delayed to give the UN sponsored talks a chance. However, the recent escalation of attacks by Al Houthis on Saudi civilian population and facilities in the southern border areas and the series of attacks on oil tankers shows that neither the militia nor its masters in Tehran are interested in peace.

The UN has so far failed to produce any tangible results in the ongoing talks due to the failure of Al Houthi to honour promises on the negotiatio­n table. The deal on the handover of Al Hodeida port to UN supervisor­s, signed in 2019, has yet to be implemente­d by the group despite a great deal of pressure from the UN and the EU.

Monday’s decision by the US is absolutely the rightmove at the right time. Some aid groups claim the decision could complicate their humanitari­an work in the war- ravaged country. On the contrary, designatio­n of the group as a terror organisati­on will actually put ample pressure on its leaders and their backers in Tehran to finally heed the UN calls for a peaceful settlement, which is obviously stalled by Iran. Tehran clearly would want to use the conflict in Yemen as a bargaining chip in its expected talks with the upcomingBi­denadminis­trationona­newnuclear­deal. The US decision has effectivel­y stripped Tehran of that card.

Meanwhile, the move gives the UN elbow room inits talk with the militia to end thewar and the suffering of millions of Yemenis, especially following the Riyadh agreement that led to the formation of a unity government in Aden.

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