Dozens of journalists held
hostage by Houthis in Yemen
NEWS / MIDDLE EAST
Yemen Middle East War
SIGN UP
Houthi fighters stand by a tank after Yemen's
former president Ali Abdullah Saleh was killed on
Monday [Khaled Abdullah/Reuters]
Houthi rebels in Yemen have held
dozens of journalists captive for days at
a television station in the capital and a
media watchdog has demanded their
immediate release.
According to Reporters Without Borders
(RSF ), the rebels launched rocket-
propelled grenades at the headquarters
of the Yemen Al Youm TV channel in
Sanaa on Saturday before storming the
station and holding hostage 41
employees inside.
Three security guards were wounded in
the attack, the group quoted diplomatic
sources as saying.
"We condemn the violent actions
towards journalists by the Houthis,
which constitute serious violations of
the Geneva Conventions," said
Alexandra El Khazen, head of RSF's
Middle East desk.
Advertisement
"This hostage-taking is typical of the
climate of hostility in Yemen towards
journalists who are often targeted in
this conflict. We call on the Houthi
rebels to immediately release the TV
channel's journalists."
The assault and hostage-taking comes
amid heightened tensions after forces
loyal to former president Ali Abdullah
Saleh severed ties with the Houthis,
sparking days of gun battles and
artillery fire in the capital.
At least 234 people have been killed and
more than 400 wounded in fighting in
Sanaa since the beginning of the month,
the International Committee of the Red
Cross (ICRC) said on Tuesday.
Saleh's vehicle was struck by an RPG
fire on Monday and he was later shot to
death, raising questions about what
happens next in the nearly three-year
war that has killed at least 10,000
people.
Yemen Al Youm TV is affiliated with the
General People's Congress, Saleh's
party.
RSF's sources said the journalists were
forced to surrender the TV channel's
access codes, enabling the Houthis to
broadcast their own content.
At least 13 other journalists and media
workers are currently held hostage in
Yemen by armed groups, including the
Houthis and al-Qaeda.
Yemen is ranked 166th out of 180
countries in RSF's 2017 World Press
Freedom Index.
The bloody conflict has left
impoverished Yemen as the world's
leading humanitarian disasters with
millions of people facing famine. A
Saudi Arabia-led military coalition
fighting the Houthis continues to
blockade much of the country.
Disease outbreaks are also prevalent
with at least 2,000 deaths from cholera
and hundreds of thousands of Yemenis
stricken.
Why are British Muslim marriages unprotected by law? FEATURE / ISLAM MUSLIM MARRIAGE IN THE UK 60 percent Muslim marriages religious-only, unregistered 28 percent do not realise Islamic ceremony not legally recognised 66 percent know union has no legal status 50 percent do not intend to have marriage legalised - Source: Channel 4 survey Aina Khan Aina Khan is a journalist focusing on race, faith and identity. She's reading a masters in religion in politics at SOAS. @ ainajkhan United Kingdom Islam Europe, Maureen, right, was not entitled to financial support after her husband Rashid - the father of her child - passed away [Courtesy: Maureen] London, England - When Maureen wed her husband Rashid in a Muslim ceremony in 1973 in Bradford, she knew that should the relationship fall apart, she would not be entitled to share his assets. Her marriage was sanctified in the eyes of God, but in the eyes of the state it was "unregistered", not legal, and so financial protection...
Comments