On the sidelines of the gasoline crisis, the Houthi militia is chasing taxi stickers

English - Tuesday 08 March 2022 الساعة 07:52 am
Sana'a, NewsYemen:


As the repercussions of the artificial oil derivatives crises intensified, the Houthi terrorist militia went after paper stickers on taxi glass in Sanaa.

For the second week in a row, thousands of cars and public vehicles parked in the streets with extensions of more than 5 km, and most of the taxis and internal transport buses stopped due to the lack of oil derivatives and their prices on the black market run by the Houthi militia reached imaginary prices.

While it continues to detain more than 500 trucks transporting oil derivatives at checkpoints called "customs ports" along the roads linking the liberated areas and the areas under its control, the Houthi militia in Sana'a intends to implement a campaign for what it called "removing the reflector stickers - blocking sunlight - from cars." The fee, starting March 13th.

All owners of taxis and buses vowed punitive measures against the violators, while a new campaign of levies and royalties was considered. Ali Seif, a bus driver in Sanaa, said, "Instead of implementing a campaign to break the siege of the locomotives, they went down to remove the stickers," noting that the car windshield stickers are automatically removed from the car. The heat of the sun and buses standing in queues at filling stations.

Next to Seif, Abdullah Al-Hamdani, a truck driver, believes that the next campaign will be to remove the "slush" from the roof of taxi buses, in what is a sarcastic expression of reality.

Earlier, the Oil Importers Union, in Sanaa, confirmed the involvement of the terrorist Houthi militia, in fabricating the fuel crisis, which is the worst ever in Sanaa and the rest of the Houthi-controlled areas, noting that the oil company and another private company affiliated with the Houthis, are fighting oil traders from outside the militia. Causing a stifling crisis in derivatives that those areas have been experiencing for months.

The Houthi militia receives oil subsidies from Tehran, which it sells to citizens at prices three times higher than its prices in the global market, and imposed successive price doses on the prices of these materials, reaching three times their price in 2014.