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“My son Ammar went out in the morning to graze the sheep, so a mine bursted him in front of us and tore him to pieces, not even a trace of his clothes was left.”.. This is how Nazira Ali Karashi recounted her misfortune.
She lost her son in front of her eyes and was unable to prevent this from happening, as the Houthi mines tampered with her young son’s body at her sight, but she stood unable to save him. She continues the incident in shock. The mine explosion eradicated Ammar’s childhood and stole his life, and also stole a mother’s smile and tore her heart apart.
Ammar was killed and his immaculate body was buried, and died with him the humanity of the Houthi militia members, who had no sense of their countrymen. They have turned into monsters motivated by their unbridled desire for power.
Al-Houthi mines left Ammar a torn, lifeless body. The creatures that are called “animals” refuse to do what this group has done. It has turned Yemen into a large prison whose inhabitants groan from the Houthis brutality and crime.
During the past period, those putschists managed to surpass all the terrorists ’imaginations by planting more than a million and 500 thousand mines, they endeavored to form them intentionally to kill and harm bodies. We did not mention the sea mines, which have become a threat to maritime navigation and fishermen.
Mines have become a real danger to Yemenis in general, especially since the Houthis planted and are still laying mines randomly and without maps, whose presence would contribute to stopping the Yemenis bloodshed. But these putschists as much as they astonished us by mastering killing policies in all its methods and types, they also intend that this killing series continues as far as possible, indifferent to international laws or to the divine religions prohibitions or to moral and human values.
This is part of a long list full of Houthi crimes that have exhausted Yemen, and threatening its future to a large extent.
Civilians are paying a heavy bill for the Houthis laying mines in civilian areas. This was confirmed by Mabkhout Athban, a member of Al-Jouf Organization for Liberties and Human Rights, who said that mine accidents are frequent, and their victims turn into mere numbers in addition to the suffering of those who are permanently disabled.
Fangs of death are embedded in the Yemeni land, and do not intend to escape it until it is totally ruined. But Project Masam workers, despite the risks and difficulties, were able to clear more than 200,000 mines, unexploded ammunition and explosive devices, a staggering number whose presence would have killed thousands of innocent people.
Masam teams are making tremendous efforts to remove these explosive objects from the Yemenis paths who are fed up with their presence. In addition to killing them and referring hundreds to the lists of disabled, it caused a suffocating economic crisis that terribly affected the Yemenis.
In just two weeks since its landing in Al-Omari, Team 29, Masam, managed to clear 71 anti-tank mines from an area of 500 square meters.
This cleared area is important for citizens, as it is the main region entrance, and from there passes the main road that school students and farmers use to reach their lands and water wells.
The Houthis want to return Yemen to prehistoric times, yet these militias still insist on calling what they are doing “revolution.”