UN suspends movement in areas held by Houthhi after the staff has been detained
The United Nations (UN) say that it suspended all the movements in the areas of the Yemen held in Houthho after armed group in the capital, Sanaa, in the capital of Sanaa detained a certain UN staff.
The UN said he was actively involved in Houthhi senior officials to try to ensure the release of all detained employees. There were no official Houthis statements yet.
This is not the first time the group has detained UN workers – numerous staff members were held last year. Houthis have also detained about 20 Yemeni employees of the US Embassy in the last three years.
Human rights groups also accuse the movement of abducted, tortured and held in arbitrary custody of hundreds of civilians.
Houthis supporting the Iranian Iranian people fought a coalition under the guidance of the Saudi in Yemen for almost a decade. The conflict, which broke out after Houthis forced the Yemeni government at the time, had a great stopping for the last two years.
But the Houthi has attracted renewed international attention by targeting ships in the Red Sea and shooting rockets towards Israel in the last fifteen months, which they say is supported by Hamas and Palestine.
Their actions were initiated by retaliation in Houth positions in Yemen from the USA, Israel and the UK.
Ever since the break of fire in Gaza began, Houthis said he would reduce the attacks on shipping and stopped shooting in Israel if he continued with a tribute.
However, one of the first works of President Trump on the takeover of duty was, however, to order Houthhis to be Return to the American list of foreign terrorist organizations.
Despite everything, the group remains control of the large areas of Yemen.
The country was the poorest in the Middle East before the war began in 2015. Hundreds of thousands of people have since died in combat or illness and hunger worsened by conflict.
UN agencies provide a vital life line for millions of Yemenis their food and medical help.
But they regularly had problems reaching people in more remote areas outside the main cities and cities, and Houthhi officials regularly reported that they obstructed humanitarian assistance in the regions they control.