The Houthi government commemorates the death of his father.. and Bin Habtoor describes him as "divine"

English - Monday 10 July 2023 الساعة 03:39 pm
Sana'a, NewsYemen:

Abdulaziz bin Habtoor, head of the unrecognized Houthi militia government, claimed that commemorating the death of the group's leader's father, Badr al-Din al-Houthi, "is a national matter related to the Yemeni people and their steadfastness and steadfastness in confrontation and their victory over enemies," as he put it.

In one of the forms of official hypocrisy and public acquiescence of the Houthi family in Sana'a, Bin Habtoor, who held the position of president of the University of Aden before moving to Sana'a, denied that the official celebration of the death anniversary of Al-Houthi (the father) would be a "family, regional or partisan" occasion.

On Sunday, July 9, 2023, the Houthi militia - the Iranian arm in Yemen - harnessed all state institutions, official agencies, local authorities, and executive offices to commemorate the death of the father of the group's leader, Badr al-Din al-Houthi, in conjunction with the continued holding of rhetorical activities in state institutions, as it calls the state.

In the event attended by virtual senior state officials in Sana'a, Bin Habtoor (Al-Houthi) described the father as a (divine figure) and claimed that she is one of the "personalities that the Yemeni people respect, appreciate and revere." Bin Habtoor praised Al-Houthi's writings with a sectarian and sectarian context, which he said It contributed to confronting what he described as (Wahhabi ideology), in reference to the hate speech that was contained among Muslims, incitement to violence, and a recurrence of Islamic history's struggles over power.

Similar activities were held at the governorate level, and in these events speeches were delivered by Houthi leaders who restricted science and knowledge to the writings of the one commemorating his death, and considered what is below as false beliefs and misconceptions. And she talked about fighting the deceased for what she described as ideas alien to society, "false cultures, and opposition to takfiri projects that stir up strife and hatred," as they put it.