A Brotherhood-Houthi plot turns against its makers.. Demands to file a theft case against Al Jazeera detectives

English - Saturday 27 August 2022 الساعة 03:19 pm
Sana'a, NewsYemen, private:

The Detective program, broadcast by the Qatari Brotherhood channel, Al-Jazeera, showed the extent of awareness reached by the people of the south in dealing with the attempts of some hostile forces to reopen the files of old conflicts between comrades, which amounted to a demand to file a case against the program's authors on charges of stealing the archives of the south.

The detective program presented by the Brotherhood, Jamal Al-Maliky, dealt in two parts with the events of January 13 that took place in the capital, Aden in 1986, among the companions of the Socialist Party, which claimed the lives of thousands of citizens, as it hosted southern political leaders, led by the former southern president.  Ali Nasser Muhammad, who was president of the south when the events occurred.

Al-Maliky and Al-Jazeera channel tried, through the program, to recall what happened in that era and revive the divisions that prevailed to influence the unity of the southern ranks, which had a major role in the successive victories they achieved against one of their most prominent opponents participating in the summer 1994 war, represented by the Islah Party, the local branch of the organization  The terrorist Brotherhood in Yemen.

Unless the authors of the episode, entitled "The Enemy Brothers", had in mind that this work, which has been in preparation for years, - according to the statements of the author - will turn against its industrialists, who only gained more southern cohesion from it.

Lutfi Shatara, a prominent leader in the Southern Transitional Council, says, "The art of ignoring is the best response to what Al-Jazeera presents these days and this time in digging up a history that has been overtaken by all southerners."  Pointing out that all the leaders of the STC have nothing to do with the past of the south and that they represent the political mosaic of the south.

While others saw that what Al-Jazeera had presented through digging up the past was a Brotherhood-Houthi plot targeting the south, its victories, and the actions of the Presidential Command Council to prepare for the decisive battle.

Aseel al-Saqladi, the director of the media center for the Southern Giants Brigades, says, "Al-Houthi realizes the defeat he suffers when the presidential launch of the first military operation for this, and with the support of an Arab state, he resorted to a vile battle whose weapon is sedition between his opponents."

He added that this sedition was openly launched by the clown Hussein Al-Ezzi - the deputy foreign minister in the government of the unrecognized militias - all the way to the detective program that hosts Houthis, most notably the Houthi socialist Abu Asba.

Southern media professionals, during their coverage of the content of the episode's parts, questioned the Al-Janoub TV archive, and demanded that a case be filed against Al-Jazeera and the episode's producers on charges of theft.

The journalist Khaled Salman says: "This episode of The Detective, like the previous one, is all archived by Aden TV after January, and those in charge should file a public theft case and claim Al-Jazeera exclusive," noting that whoever steals history and trades in pain, will not feel ashamed of being a thief.

As for the deputy head of the Transitional Media Department, Mansour Saleh, he stressed the need to hold accountable those involved in the looting and selling of the archives of Aden TV and Radio, stressing that they are known and that this is an urgent national mission.