Independent UN experts urge Yemen’s Houthis to free detained Baha'i followers
CAIRO (AP) — Human rights experts working for the United Nations on Monday urged Yemen’s Houthi rebels to release five people from the country’s Baha’i religious minority who have been in detention for a year.
The five are among 17 Baha’i followers detained last May when the Houthis raided a Baha’i gathering in the capital of Sanaa. The experts said in a statement that 12 have since been released “under very strict conditions” but that five remain “detained in difficult circumstances.”
There have long been concerns about the treatment of the members of the Baha’i minority at the hands of the Yemeni rebels, known as Houthis, who have ruled much of the impoverished Arab country’s north and the capital, Sanaa, since the civil war started in 2014.
The experts said they “urge the de facto authorities to release” the five remaining detainees, warning they were at “serious risk of torture and other human rights violations, including acts tantamount to enforced disappearance.”
Related articles
OpenAI pauses ChatGPT voice after Scarlett Johansson comparisons
NEW YORK (AP) — OpenAI says it plans to halt the use of one of its ChatGPT voices after some users s2024-05-21China boasts 2 mln beds in integrated medical, elderly care institutions
By the end of 2023, China's more than 7,800 institutions capable of providing integrated medical2024-05-21King Charles and Queen Camilla could miss super
The society wedding of the year is less than three weeks away, yet King Charles and Queen Camilla ha2024-05-21China compiles inventory of 914,000 patents: CNIPA
Over 1,700 universities and research institutions in China have compiled an inventory of 914,000 pat2024-05-21Six killed in a 'foiled coup' in Congo, the army says
KINSHASA, Congo (AP) — Six people were killed and dozens arrested following attacks on the residence2024-05-219 killed in northwest China's traffic accident
Nine people were killed in a traffic accident in northwest China's Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region2024-05-21
atest comment