Houthis Order US, British Nationals to Leave Yemen
Yemen’s Houthi authorities have ordered US and British UN and Sanaa-based humanitarian workers to leave the country within a month, according to a letter and a Houthi spokesman on Wednesday.
The decision comes after the United States and Britain, with the cooperation of other nations, launched strikes on military sites of the Iran-aligned organization, which has been launching attacks on commercial ships in the Red Sea that it claims are related to Israel.
Last Monday, the US administration added the Houthis to a list of terrorist organizations as part of its efforts to prevent assaults on international ships in the Red Sea. The Houthis have stated that their strikes are in sympathy with the Palestinians as Israel bombs Gaza.
“The ministry … would like to stress that you must inform officials and workers with U.S. and British citizenships to prepare to leave the country within 30 days,” said a letter sent by the Houthi foreign ministry to the U.N.’s acting humanitarian coordinator in Yemen, Peter Hawkins.
The letter also ordered foreign organisations to not hire American and British citizens for Yemen’s operations. Houthi top negotiator Mohammed Abdulsalam confirmed the letter’s authenticity to Reuters.
The office of Hawkins, who is himself a British national, did not respond to a request for comment.
The U.S. embassy said in a statement it was aware of reports about the letter but “cannot speak on behalf of the U.N. or humanitarian organizations in Yemen as to what they may have received from Houthi ‘authorities'”.
The British embassy said staff had not yet been told to leave and the mission was in close contact with the U.N. on the issue.
“The U.N. provide vital assistance to the Yemeni people … via the very sea routes that the Houthis are jeopardising,” the British mission in Yemen said in a statement. “Nothing should be done that hinders their ability to deliver,” it added.
The Houthi movement controls much of Yemen after nearly a decade of war against a U.S.-backed and Saudi-led coalition. The war has shifted to a “no-war, no-peace” stalemate as the fighting has largely stopped, but both parties have failed to renew formally a U.N.-brokered ceasefire.
U.S. and British warplanes, ships and submarines have launched dozens of air strikes across Yemen in retaliation for Houthi attacks as container vessels have been forced to divert from the Red Sea, the fastest freight route from Asia to Europe. U.S. and British forces on Tuesday targeted a Houthi underground storage site as well as missile and surveillance capabilities, the Pentagon said.