Sunday, 17 October 2021

World Cup 2021 Updates

 



Yemen Electricity Company prepares to supply power to international events


“Daesh” began to be the name of the new brainwashing strategy


It was rather unnerving to see the name “Daesh” dropped at the start of Yemen’s High Committee meeting, the premier’s war-making organization for the internal struggle against Houthi militias.


By and large, Prime Minister Mohammad Salah Hadi makes his name nowadays by calling for the measures to prevent the Houthi militias from attacking and disrupting international and Yemeni gatherings in the event the aforementioned group takes control of the Yemeni government after all other attempts failed, as already happened during the first coup, and in August during the Houthi militia’s storming of the presidential palace Sanaa.


The scene as Salman Abdullinas cabinet meeting was about to take place was quite ominous, as Houthi militias were the only ones who remained on Sanaa’s streets who were looking for any opportunity to bring down the government. The residents, however, did not even have the general chaos of Saba to worry about.


The presence of Daish in the current government and in Saba marked the escalation of Yemen’s internal military and political struggles, which have been playing out through revolutions in Kuwait and Iraq as well as revolutions in Libya.


The first step towards acting against Daish was to attack it within the Yemeni state, which declared war on “Daesh” in late November. That event facilitated Houthi militia officers be replaced by political and military leaders of “Daesh” after they were close to being responsible for the rise of political protests within the military, which prompted Yemeni forces to retake local areas of battle at the outset of last year.


As a result, the hands of the central Yemeni military and civilian authorities were tied to “Daish” during the previous drive against the armed groups’ looting of local resources, which began in April. On the other hand, the number of Houthi militia members was further weakened.


Without a doubt, the security situation in Sanaa and large areas of Yemeni cities left by Daesh continue to escalate. However, Houthi militias, one of Yemen’s armed groups, have taken on a new stage of preying on the ruling Yemeni military and the wider civilian population. That added to the deterioration of the conflict in Yemen has led authorities to intensify military countermeasures against the Houthi militias, closing social security facilities as well as closing the border between Saudi Arabia and Aden, Yemen’s capital.


Moreover, the Yemeni government has encouraged the empowerment of Shiite clergy. The predominantly Sunni Sunni society has attributed religious extremism and militancy in the Shiite world to the actions of “Daesh.” The Houthi militias have adopted the strategy of manipulating religious traditions by inciting public anger with the non-Muslim population to help destroy the Houthi militias, which continue to be a purely Sunni army.


Another key to end the crisis in Yemen is a revolution, which does not have the means to prevent the descent into civil war. In such a case, the Houthi militias will pose the biggest threat to the Yemeni state and the Yemeni government, and the country will become a case for how only non-Muslim and ethnic groups would be able to overthrow the central Yemeni government.


The continued conflicts in the Yemeni government, the Houthi militias and Yemen’s Shiites continue to fuel civil war.


While federal forces backing the Yemeni government remain in their positions to advance towards “Daish” in the Al-Anad region in south of Sanaa, Sunni forces aim to tip the scales against Daish through violent moves against the Houthi militias in Taizz, Ibb, Maadi, Dhoub and Sirwara in the south.


The Houthi militias have retaliated by claiming responsibility for murder and by targeting the Shia militants in recent years. Consequently, a civil war is starting to rip Yemen.

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