on Wednesday 27 January, 2021

UN is involving in smuggling Houthi leaders and funds: Sources

FILE PHOTO
by : Yemen Details
The United Nations is still working to smuggle Houthi leaders to and from Yemen, after the Iranian ambassador, Hassan Erlo, on October 14, 2020, among 20 Iranian experts, along with 240 people who arrived via an Omani plane at the airport.
Navigation sources at Sanaa International Airport revealed that a UN plane carried Houthi leaders from the Sultanate of Oman to Sanaa International Airport. This group was headed by the son of the Houthi leader, Ali Muhammad Al-Kahlani, despite the United Nations' constant denial of its involvement in smuggling Houthi leaders from and to Yemen.
The Houthis had sent Sharaf Ali Muhammad Al-Kahlani to Canada to provide political asylum, work to launder money and smuggle it to Yemen, and lead human rights organizations to attack the Arab coalition and the Yemeni government, but the Canada government discovered these operations.
Informed sources said that the son of the Houthi leader fled Canada through human smuggling, after the judicial authorities in Canada directed him to be arrested for trial, after discovering his work in money laundering and smuggling to Yemen, and he arrived in Oman.
The same sources stated that Sharaf Al-Kahlani left from Oman International Airport via a UN plane to Sana'a Airport, which confirms the United Nations' involvement in smuggling Houthi leaders through the Sultanate of Oman.
The office of the United Nations envoy to Yemen, Martin Griffiths, has repeatedly denied his involvement in facilitating the movement of the Houthi leaders, and officials from the Lebanese Hezbollah and the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, to the Yemeni capital, which is controlled by the Houthi terrorist group, but the repeated exit and entry of the Houthi leaders confirms the involvement of the UN envoy in smuggling these leaders.
Political observers are calling for the Yemeni legitimacy and the Arab coalition to clarify how the Houthi leaders move freely between the airports of Sanaa and Oman, and to declare a clear position on that, especially after the United States of America designated the Houthi militia as a terrorist group.