The Legitimacy that is Kidnapped by Brotherhood" Keeps Communications in the Hands of the "Erlo" Militia

English - Saturday 07 August 2021 الساعة 10:28 am
Aden, NewsYemen, special:

Yemenis launched the hashtag #TahrirTelecommunications, stressing that the Houthi terrorist militia's economic strength lies in the huge financial resources it derives from the telecommunications sector, such as Yemen Mobile and the Public Telecommunications Corporation, in light of the weak legitimacy that has remained silent until this moment.

Journalist Salah bin Ghair confirmed that the network and telecommunications companies in Yemen generate billions for the Houthis, and support their control over the areas, while the Houthis give a fragmented part to figures in the gang called (legitimacy), as he described it, so that gang desperately refuses to withdraw the communication networks from the hands of  The Houthis, since 2015.

The southern politician, Fahd Al-Khulaifi, considered that the legitimate government refuses to liberate communications from the Houthi grip in Sanaa and transfer them to Aden for narrow political accounts that serve the Houthi militia more than others.  He stressed that the Houthi militias receive billions per month from telecom companies, and liberating them from their grip in Sanaa and transferring them to Aden would be a severe blow to the Houthis and their financial resources.

As for journalist Arslan Al-Sulaimani, he said that the risks of communications remaining under the control of the Houthi militia are great, as well as the value of airline tickets paid to Al-Houthi so far, as well as companies including - Shibam Holding, Libyan Holding, Asas Real Estate and the Yemeni Bank for Reconstruction and Development - all of their revenues to Al-Houthi.  In contrast to the enormous financial and economic resources monthly, and electronic reconnaissance of the military and resistance forces through drones as well as through communications.

The political journalist, Abdul-Malik Al-Yousifi, said that the failure of the legitimacy, which he described as the "corruption mafia", to liberate communications from the Houthi mafia, despite the military, security and economic risks that it entails, puts great question marks about the reason for the inaction.  Pointing out that people's suffering from poor communication can not be tolerated.

Journalist Alaa Hanash supported the move to liberate communications from the grip of the Houthi militia, which makes huge money from communications revenues and taxes.  He explained that the Yemeni legitimacy that has been infiltrated by the Brotherhood, as he said, is capable of liberating communications from the Houthis, but it is afraid to do so, stressing that the legitimacy behind the communications remains in the hands of the Houthis.

And a member of the Transitional Council, Fadel Al-Shutairi, considered that communications represent the winning strategic card on which the Houthis relied in supplying the budget with millions of dollars, in addition to turning it into a means of espionage so that they can eavesdrop, determine locations, and penetrate social media accounts.

The southern activist, Naif Al-Jadi, asked about the reasons for the failure of the legitimate government, which is controlled by the Muslim Brotherhood, the Yemeni branch of the Islah party, and is this an agreement between them and the Houthi militia?