The Houthis, the de facto government authorities, should immediately release the at least eight UN staff who were arbitrarily detained between January 23 and 25, 2025, as well as dozens of staff from UN agencies and Yemeni and international civil society organizations who continue to be arbitrarily detained since May 2024, 24 organizations said today in a joint statement.
The latest wave of arrests is part of the Houthis' ongoing crackdown on human rights and humanitarian workers, which intensified last year. Starting on May 31, 2024, for over two weeks the Houthis conducted a series of raids in areas under their control, arbitrarily detaining 13 UN staff and at least 50 staff from Yemeni and international civil society organizations. To date, only three people have been released - one UN staff member and two NGO staff members. The rest remain detained without access to a lawyer or their families and without charge.
The office of the UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for Yemen confirmed the arrests in a statement published on January 24, 2025, noting that seven UN staff members, including personnel from the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNICEF, had been detained. UN Secretary-General António Guterres condemned the arrests, calling for the immediate and unconditional release of all detained individuals.
The Houthis' actions continue a troubling pattern of repression of civic space in Yemen and a brutal targeting of human rights and humanitarian workers under baseless accusations of espionage. In August 2024, the Houthi-run Supreme Council for Management and Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs and International Cooperation (SCMCHA) reiterated the Houthis' restrictive policies on humanitarian activities in five-day long meetings with UN and INGO staff, warning them "of the dangers of espionage that may be exploited within the framework of humanitarian work."
The arrests have been accompanied by an ongoing Houthi-led media campaign accusing humanitarian organizations and their staff of "conspiring" against the country's interests through their projects. Following the first wave of arrests, on June 10, 2024, the Houthi Security and Intelligence Service announced the "discovery" of what they called "a spying network." Two days later, Al Masirah TV, a Houthi-affiliated channel, broadcast a video featuring a different group of detainees, who had been detained between 2021 and 2023 and held incommunicado since then, "confessing" to spying.
The Houthis have a track record of using torture to extract "confessions," raising fears these detainees were coerced to "confess."
Since 2015, several human rights organizations, including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, the Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies, and the Gulf Center for Human Rights have documented scores of cases involving journalists, human rights defenders, political opponents and members of religious minorities who had been subjected to unfair trials before Houthi-controlled courts on trumped charges. In all these cases, the Houthis' prosecution authorities appeared to have brought the spying charges as means to persecute political opponents and silence peaceful dissent.
Notably, on June 1, 2024, the Specialized Criminal Court (SCC) sentenced 44 individuals to death on trumped up spying charges following an unfair mass trial. 16 were sentenced in absentia while 28 were brought before the SCC.
These waves of arrests exacerbate the already deteriorating humanitarian situation in Yemen, where at least 80 percent of the population relies on aid, according to the UN. In response to the recent arrests, the UN announced the suspension of all official movements into and within areas under the Houthis' control, a decision that will severely impact the delivery of life-saving assistance to millions. Following the arrests of last year, a number of governments decided to either gradually or immediately end their programs in Yemen, such as the Swedish government which on November 26, 2024, announced that it "decided to stop providing development assistance to Yemen."
On January 26, 2025, the Houthis' Deputy Foreign Minister Abdulwahid Abu Ras attacked both statements made by the UN Secretary General and the UN Resident Coordinator stating that "Yemen firmly rejects and condemns all forms of external interference in its internal affairs." He further justified the arrests by framing them as a defense against foreign plots, specifically naming the United States and Israel as threats.
The Houthis' new wave of arrests comes after US president Donald Trump re-designated the Houthis as a "foreign terrorist organization" through an executive order on January 22, 2025, citing the Houthis' actions in the Red Sea where they "have fired at U.S. Navy warships dozens of times since 2023, endangering American men and women in uniform." Since it remains unclear whether and to what extent such designation allows for humanitarian exemptions, this decision risks further harming the delivery of essential humanitarian aid to Yemeni civilians. By imposing additional barriers on aid groups operating in Houthi-controlled areas, this move threatens to worsen the already dire situation for those in need of critical assistance, as Oxfam has stated. President Trump also decided to cut funding for aid programs funded by the US government globally for 90 days during a budget review. The executive order also risks significantly harming the provision of critically-needed aid in Yemen.
The undersigned organizations urgently call on the international community, in particular those states with an established communication channel with the Houthis, to do everything in their power to ensure the immediate and unconditional release of all those who have been arbitrarily detained, including human rights and humanitarian workers.
Signatories:
- Abductees Mothers Association
- Al-Nama Center for Humanitarian Media
- Amnesty International
- Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies
- Center for Strategic Studies to Support Women and Children
- Civic Center for Support and Advocacy
- CIVICUS: Global Alliance
- Dameer Foundation for Rights and Freedoms
- Electronic Organization For Humanitarian Media EOHM
- Foundation for the Defense of Rights and Freedoms
- Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect
- Gulf Centre for Human Rights (GCHR)
- Human Rights Watch
- International Federation for Human Rights
- Justice4Yemen Pact Coalition
- Munazamat Muhasabat Huquq Al'Iinsan
- Musaala Organization for Human Rights
- PASS_Foundation Peace_for_Sustainable_Societies
- Qana,a Media and Rights Foundation
- Rasd Center for Rights and development
- SAM Organization for Rights and Liberties
- Sana'a Center for Strategic Studies
- The Yemeni Coalition for Monitoring Human Rights Violations- Rasd Coalition
- Yemen Future for Culture and Media Development