Media campaigns to stop Oman's support for militias, the Houthis and the Brotherhood are mobilizing in defense of Muscat's role
English - Wednesday 09 February 2022 الساعة 03:45 pmActivists on social media expressed their dissatisfaction with the Omani role in the Yemen war.
Yemenis accuse Muscat of supporting the Houthi militia in a semi-official manner, especially in the recent period.
Oman facilitates many difficulties for the militias and hosts a number of the group’s leaders in Muscat.
It is also, according to activists, one of the most prominent smuggling routes for the group, and all weapons, equipment and money arrive through it.
The politicians of the Arab coalition and the government of parity called for a serious stance on Muscat's interventions and facilities for militias and its hosting of personalities who oppose the government and the coalition and carry out work and support for personalities in liberated governorates to obstruct the presence of the state.
It is noteworthy that after the Omani support for the authority, which Muscat does not hide, activists and political and media figures from the Yemeni Brotherhood launched campaigns in defense of it and its interference in Yemen.
Yemeni Brotherhood activists tweeted unified tweets, praising Muscat's role in Yemen and trying to beautify its interventions with impartiality.
The defense of Muscat was unified between the activists of the Houthi and Brotherhood groups, and the tweets of Mukhtar al-Rahbi, Adel al-Hasani and Muhammad al-Bakhiti were similar in defending the Omani role.
Southern journalist Fawaz al-Hanashi tweeted about the Omani interventions, saying, "With the passage of years of war, the Houthis are getting stronger through qualitative weapons that are delivered from Iran through the Sultanate of Oman, in full view and hearing of the coalition countries."
Meanwhile, political activist Hussein bin Atef Jaber said, "Oman is the lively and malicious Sultanate, which was the first reason for prolonging the life of al-Houthi and the secret to his steadfastness. It is enough, you house of neutrality."
Atef adds in another tweet, "Seven years of our silence on the malicious Omani role in supporting Houthi terrorism, which shed the blood of innocents. The torrent has reached the slander, O Sultanate. Unfortunately, Oman has become the Houthi operations room to manage the battle in the south and north. It is enough, Dar Al-Fitna."
In turn, political activist Essam al-Faqih said in a tweet to him, "The neutrality of the Sultanate of Oman is represented in opening the doors of arms smuggling to the Houthis, harboring Houthi leaders, diplomatic action to save Houthis when they are in trouble, and providing political support for the Houthi position to the international community."
He pointed out that the neutrality of the Sultanate of Oman is a complete alignment with the Houthis.
Al-Faqih explained in another tweet, that Omani companies are importing military equipment and smuggling it to the Houthis in Yemen.
He asked, "Is it reasonable that the Omani authorities are ignorant of what their companies are doing??? Or is the Sultanate of Oman a major partner in smuggling weapons to the Houthi group?"
Al-Faqih added, "Brotherhood Sheikh Al-Huraizi is the smuggling mediator between the Sultanate of Oman and the terrorist Houthi militia, and he is considered a key player in confusing the situation and the leader of those calling for the expulsion of the coalition forces from Al-Mahra Governorate."
In turn, the southern activist, Wathiq Al-Hasani, tweeted, "Those who stood against the Arab coalition were received by Amman, which spread roses for them and provided them with all means to weave conspiracies."
Activist Muhammad Al-Noud tweeted about the role of Muscat, "The state of Oman is not neutral, as it promotes," noting that had it not been for Oman and its facilitation of everything for the Houthi militia, they would have ended today and have become a thing of the past.
Al-Nod continued, "The coalition was first to boycott Oman first, because it sided with the Houthis more than the state of Iran."