الخميس 25-04-2024 02:19:42 ص : 16 - شوال - 1445 هـ
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How does the Houthi militia work in coordination with al-Qaeda and ISIS?!

الجمعة 02 إبريل-نيسان 2021 الساعة 09 مساءً / alislah-ye.net - quoted from the alsahwa.net website

 

 

An intelligence report that the Yemeni government delivered to the Security Council today, Wednesday, revealed that the Houthi militia had released 252 al-Qaeda and ISIS members who were in the prisons of the Political Security and National Security agencies in Sanaa and other governorates.

And the intelligence report issued by the Political Security and National Security agencies, of which the alsahwa.net website obtained a copy, confirmed the aspects of cooperation and coordination between the Houthi militia, al-Qaeda and ISIS, and that they are working according to the orientation of the Houthi militia to destabilize the security and stability of the liberated governorates and serve the Houthi coup.

 

The release of prominent leaders in the al-Qaeda Organization:

In order to refute the allegations of the Houthi militia, which claim to fight the Organization and the presence of elements in the liberated governorates, the report listed the names of the most prominent leaders of al-Qaeda and ISIS who were released by the Houthi militia from political security and national security prisons, and most of them live in Houthi-controlled areas, and other elements have been used to carry out terrorist operations in Marib and other liberated governorates.

And according to the report, in 2018 the Houthi militia released the terrorist Jamal Muhammad al-Badawi, one of the most prominent masterminds in the bombing of the USS Cole, the terrorist Sami Fadhl Dayyan, accused of planning the assassination of the martyr Major General Salem Qattn on June 18, 2012, the terrorist Mayyad al-Hammadi, one of the cell of the al-Sab'een Square bombing on May 21, 2012, the terrorist Maher al-Rumaym, one of the cell of the attempted assassination of the President of the Republic, Field Marshal Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi, on May 12, 2013, and the terrorist Saddam Ali al-Himyari, known as Abu al-Fidaa.

The report pointed out that most of the leaders and elements of the al-Qaeda and ISIS Organizations are in the areas controlled by the Houthi militia, despite the militia's allegations to fight the two Organizations, in addition to the fact that the militia recruited some of them and sent them to the liberated governorates in order to carry out terrorist acts there.

 

Al-Qaeda leaders fighting in the ranks of the Houthi militia:

The report mentioned the most prominent leaders of ISIS and al-Qaeda present in the governorates that are still under the control of the militias, among them the terrorist Arif Mujalli, who became a leader in the Houthi group, the terrorist Ali al-Kindi, nicknamed (Abu Israel), who is the coordinator between the Houthi militia and ISIS, and the terrorist Tariq al-Hadrami, his real name is Hisham Bawazir, who was in Sanaa until 2018, is among the elements sent by the Houthi militia to carry out terrorist operations in Marib, but he was arrested by the security services.

 

One of those terrorist leaders, the terrorist Abdulaziz Salem al-Diny, who was living peacefully in the areas controlled by the Houthi militia, confirms the relationship and coordination between the militias and the organization.

At the beginning of the last year 2020, Abdulaziz al-Dini traveled from al-Bayda to Sanaa to receive treatment, while his wife received treatment at C-Plas Hospital in the Asir region - Sana'a, and then they returned to Ibb and stayed in a hotel, and then he went to Marib Governorate and was arrested on November 13, 2020.

The report also refuted the Houthi militia's allegations about the presence of al-Qaeda and ISIS elements in the liberated areas, and the fact is that the names mentioned by the militias were released and sent to the liberated governorates in order to carry out terrorist operations.

These names are: Majed Ahmed Saleh al-Salmi, Bassam Muhammad Muhammad al-Hakami, Essam al-Baadani, Osama Mansour Ali al-Qasimi, Jamal Abdu Nasser Saad al-Qumadi, Muhammad Mansour al-Arifi, Zayed al-Asadi, Ali Yahya Abdullah Hizam al-Hakami, Saad Farhan, Alaa Youssef, Abdullah al-Qasir, Ibrahim Abdullah Muhammad Ateeq Ameen Abdullah Jaafar, Bilal al-Hababi, Hashem Muhammad Rizk Kabie.

And the report pointed out that what proves the terrorist relationship between the Houthis, Al Qaeda and ISIS is that all the terrorist operations adopted by the two Organizations were carried out in the liberated governorates, while no terrorist operation was carried out in the areas controlled by the Houthi militia despite the large presence of terrorist elements in those areas.

 

Misinforming and deceiving:

Concerning the misinformation published by the Houthi militia about the presence of al-Qaeda and ISIS elements in Marib, the report indicates that the militia deliberately misleads by publishing the GPS coordinates of a primary and secondary school in the Kara area and the GPS coordinates of the Governmental Medical Authority Hospital in Marib affiliated with the Ministry of Health that these two sites are educational and medical shelters for the Organization of al-Qaeda.

The report pointed out that the militias' attempt was aimed at deluding the international community that the militias possess accurate information on terrorism and diverting the attention of the international community from the real sites of al-Qaeda and ISIS.

The 26-page report issued in Arabic, English and French languages revealed the Houthi militia’s relationship with the terrorist al-Qaeda and ISIS Organizations, security and intelligence cooperation, by releasing elements of terrorist al-Qaeda and ISIS Organizations by the Houthi militia from prisons in various ways and means aimed at cooperating in combat and terrorist operations against the legitimate government forces.

 

The release of the cell accused of killing the Saudi diplomat:

In mid-2020, the militias released 3 members of the al-Qaeda terrorist Organization who committed several terrorist crimes, most notably the assassination of the Saudi diplomat Khaled Shubaykan al-Anzi and his companion in the capital, Sana'a, on November 28, 2012, and these three live in the areas controlled by the Houthi militia.

These are: Abdulaziz Ahmad Aubbad al-Qadi, Hussein Salem Makhzama al-Aqili, Hussein Saleh Abed Rabbo al-Aqili, Yusef Saleh Abed Rabbo al-Aqili and Shaeef Abdu Muhammad Dhaif Allah al-Haymi, as well as the militias released 20 members of the two Organizations, 16 from al-Qaeda and 4 from ISIS.

 

Handing over sites to the Houthi militia in al-Bayda:

In September 2019, the Houthi militia released 5 leaders of al-Qaeda in exchange for cooperation and handing over sites with ISIS to the Houthi militia in order to be able to reach some sites on the outskirts of Marib Governorate, which is what actually happened. After three days, the terrorist al-Qaeda elements handed over all the sites, in which they were located on the borders of al-Bayda to the Houthi militia, by the so-called Sheikh Majid al-Thahab.

The elements that the Houthi militia released are: Osama al-Audayni, Abu Bakr al-Rubaie, Abdullah al-Rehab, Abdulrahman Ali Muhammad al-Ghurabi and Ibrahim al-Sanaani.

 

Planned escape operations:

One of the methods taken by the militias to release al-Qaeda and ISIS members is to fabricate orchestrated escape operations for the Organization’s members, most notably the release of 18 al-Qaeda members from the Political Security prison in al-Bayda Governorate in 2018, where the organization resorted to issuing a statement confirming the escape of its members, in order to ward off the accusation of the Houthi militia’s involvement in their release.

The report lists the names of the most prominent terrorist elements who were released from the prison through an orchestrated escape operation, indicating that they live to this day in the areas that are still under the control of the Houthi militia, and these elements are: Muhammad Abdullah al-Saadi is accused of killing the first assistant in the Political Security, Nasser Ahmad Hussein al-Wuhayshi, Ahmed Muhammad Hussein Muhammad, Abdullah Ali Kallal, Ahmed Ali Marwan, nicknamed "Antar", Mukhtar Ali Marwan, Salem Ali Abdullah al-Barakani, Nasser Abdullah Muhammad al-Radmani, Abdullah Rehab, Abdul Rahman Ali Muhammad al-Ghurabi and Abdullah Moftah.

 

Al-Qaeda elements of foreign nationalities:

The report also revealed that the militias released 23 members of the terrorist al-Qaeda Organization of different nationalities from Sana'a prisons in April 2020.

The report also indicates that the Houthi militia brought foreign elements affiliate with al-Qaeda and granted them entry permits to facilitate their movement, as happened in the smuggling process of the so-called Nasser Saleh Muhammad al-Sayaari and Aidha Saad Al-Sayaari (the two are Saudi), and they were smuggled from the borders of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia from Saada to the capital, Sana'a, and then they were given passage permits to Hadramout governorate.

The report stated that most of the ISIS elements present in their stronghold in the al-Mushayrif area in the al-Bayda Governorate in mid-2020, were led by foreign elements, and they were evacuated from the site by members of the Houthi militia's Preventive Security Service.

 

The report indicated that the leadership of al-Qaeda, ISIS and the important elements of the two organizations consider the areas under the control of the Houthi militia a safe haven, and the militias provide them and their families with medical shelter after they lack any safe haven in the areas under the control of the legitimate government.

The most prominent of those leaders that live in the non-liberated areas is the terrorist so-called Awad Jasim Mubarak, known as Abi Bakr, and another leader called Bakri, who lived in the capital, Sanaa, from 2017 until 2020, and used to move between Sanaa, al-Bayda, Rada` and Qayfah freely, the terrorist Hisham Bawazir, whose pseudonym is Tariq al-Hadrami, who lived in the Shaub district in the capital Sana'a.

 

Al-Qaeda elements living in Houthi-controlled areas:

The report also listed the names of the leaders of al-Qaeda and ISIS who were released by the militias and who live in their areas of control: Yahya Ibrahim Batri lives in Haradh, Murad Ahmad Muhammad Zahir lives in Sanaa, Nashir Ali Hizam Hadi (Abu al-Baraa) lives in the Capital Municipality, Ibrahim Dawud Ahmad Omair lives in Hodeidah, Ammar Muhammad Ali al-Ashwal (Abu Hammam) lives in the Capital Municipality, Muammar Muhammad Salih Mohsen Sharaf al-Din lives in Sana'a, Fadhl Ali Swayleh lives in al-Nour Street in the city of al-Bayda, Muhammad Abdu Amin al-Dumayni (Abu Asim) lives in al-Ja’ashen, Ibb Governorate, Fu’ad Qaid Mahyoub al-Mazhari (Abu Huthaifa) lives in al-Ja’ashen Ibb Governorate, Fawaz Abdu Murshid (Abu Basir) lives in al-Ja’ashen, Ibb Governorate. Faris Muhammad Murshid al-Yahwi and Adel Rabi’ Muhammad Ibrahim.

Al-Qaeda and ISIS elements find safe havens in the areas controlled by the Houthi militia, which pushes the members of the Organization in the areas under government control to flee to the areas that are still under the control of the Houthi militia. The report mentioned the names of 33 elements who fled to those areas, some of whom were arrested by the security services.

 

Al-Qaeda terrorist operations .. And the militias do not move:

The report mentioned that the Houthi militia is working to facilitate the implementation of terrorist operations for the terrorist Al-Qaeda Organization in areas under its control, as happened with a number of foreign nationalities. In October 2016, the Australian soccer coach, Krake, was abducted from a street in the capital, Sanaa, in broad daylight, next to an armed militia patrol. And in September 2017, Danny LaVonborn, an American engineer working for the SAFER oil company, was abducted from Fifty Street in Sanaa. In August 2020, Doctor Mathhar Muhammad Saif al-Yousifi was executed in the market of al-Sawmaa district in al-Bayda Governorate.

 

Granting al-Qaeda elements forged identity cards:

The report also revealed that the Houthi militia granted leaders and members of al-Qaeda and ISIS identity cards, documents and forged certificates, aimed at facilitating their movements under false names, especially in government-controlled areas to carry out terrorist operations.

And the militias gave the terrorist leader in al-Qaeda, Jamal Muhammad al-Badawi, one of those responsible for the bombing of the USS Cole, and Ali Qaid al-Ansi, after their release from the Political Security prison in Sanaa in 2018, two ID cards with false names and sent them to Marib to carry out terrorist acts before they were targeted before. American drones.

According to the report, according to these documents, some members of the organization obtained passports with false names, and the report published some false names and the real names of those elements, as well as the certificates they obtained and the issuer.

 

Smuggling of weapons and drugs:

The report also revealed aspects of the relations between the militias, al-Qaeda and ISIS represented in the smuggling of weapons and drugs and military cooperation by not targeting the Organization's strongholds.

The report was supported with testimonies from the confessions of some al-Qaeda prisoners who fell in the hands of the army in the confrontations with the Houthi militia on the battlefronts, regarding the presence of the Organization’s elements fighting in the militia’s ranks. Al-Masirah TV had broadcast the news of the funeral of the two “martyrs” in mid-August 2020, and these two martyrs were the terrorist Saeed Abdullah Ahmad al-Khabrani, known as Abu Hayel, and the terrorist Hamid Abdullah Ahmad al-Khubrani, known as Abu Nawwaf.

The report revealed the release of terrorist al-Qaeda elements in February and April 2020 by the so-called "Houthi Security and Intelligence Service" affiliated with the Houthi militia, namely Abdul Rahim al-Absi, Ahmed Qahtan, Mahfouz al-Qarn, Hisham Ramada, Abdullah al-Habbari, Jamil Ahmad Melhi, Mohsen Muhammad Mohsen al-Askari, Ausam al-Theeb, Majed Abdullah Sanad.