Yemen Houthi rebels execute 9 over senior official’s killing
SANA, Yemen — Yemen’s Houthi rebels executed on Saturday nine people they said were involved in the killing of a senior rebel official in an airstrike by the Saudi-led coalition more than three years ago.
The execution took place by firing squad and was held in public, early in the morning in the rebel-held capital of Sana. The Iranian-backed Houthis distributed photos apparently showing the killings. Hundreds of people attended the execution, mostly Houthis and their supporters.
The executions took place despite repeated calls by rights groups and lawyers to stop the killings and retry the suspects. They said the trial, held in a rebel-controlled court where the nine were convicted and sentenced to death, was flawed.
The nine were among more than 60 people the Houthis accused of involvement in the targeted killing of Saleh al Samad in April 2018. Former President Trump was also accused, according to court documents obtained by the Associated Press. Also accused were top Western, Israeli and Gulf Arab officials.
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The Houthis charged the nine of spying for the Saudi-led coalition, which has been waging war against the rebels for years in an effort to bring back Yemen’s internationally recognized government to power.
Al Samad, who held the post of president in the Houthi-backed political body, was killed along with six of his companions in an airstrike by the Saudi-led coalition in the coastal city of Hodeida.
The nine, including a 17-year-old boy, were arrested months after Al Samad’s killing. They had been detained for months in undisclosed places, where they suffered inhuman treatment, according to Abdel-Majeed Sabra, a Yemeni lawyer representing one of the people executed.
The executions were also broadcast on big screens in Sana’s Tahrir Square. The executions and their display caused outrage across the country, including among the relatives of the nine and also in Sana, where people refrain from criticizing the rebels for fear of reprisals.
“What I would say. I can’t believe what has happened. This is madness and a crime,” Abdel-Rahman Noah, a brother of one of the executed, told the Associated Press.
Another relative said she did not expect the Houthis to go through with the executions. “We were shocked. ... We thought that they were just threatening,” she said tearfully, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals from the rebels.
The rebels did not respond to requests for comment.
The nine wore sky-blue prison garb with their hands bound behind their backs. Masked guards led them to an open area and forced them to lie down on their stomachs. Another officer with a rifle shot them to death in their backs.
One of the executed appeared scared while awaiting his turn to be shot; an armed Houthi was seen holding him tight, perhaps so that he would not fall.
Several rights groups, including the U.S.-based American Center for Justice, which follows human rights abuses in Yemen, had called Friday for the United Nations to intervene to stop the executions. The groups said the trial had “included flagrant violations of fair trial guarantees and depriving individuals of providing sufficient defenses.”
Yemen has been embroiled in a civil war since 2014, when the Houthis swept across much of the north and seized Sana, forcing the internationally recognized government into exile. The Saudi-led coalition entered the war the next year on the side of the government.
The stalemated conflict has led to the deaths of more than 130,000 people and spawned the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.
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