The Iran-backed Houthis committed a crime by opening traffic to and from Hodeidah before removing the mines, after losing the maps they had planted in the Stockholm areas.
Local sources said that a Houthi landmine exploded in a passenger bus, killing at least ten people and wounding others.
It is noteworthy that the Houthi militia quickly opened roads for citizens towards Kilo 16 and allowed the passage of vehicles after the joint forces evacuated the areas covered by the Stockholm Agreement to prove that the joint forces were obstructing the movement of civilians while they kept their mines planted and made little effort to remove them.
The Houthis have planted thousands of mines and explosive devices in various residential neighborhoods, main and secondary roads along the western coast, causing hundreds of killed and wounded, mostly women and children.
Since the declaration of the UN truce, the engineering teams of the joint forces in Hodeidah have managed to dismantle thousands of mines and explosive devices of various shapes and sizes.
Local and international human rights organizations held the Houthi militia exclusively responsible for planting minefields, some of them without maps, noting that these fields constitute a real disaster whose effects will extend beyond the end of the war that the militia ignited five years ago.
Iran-backed Houthis allow traffic to Hodeidah before removing mines they panted
4 years ago