Hundreds tortured, more than 1,000 detained in Yemen's secret prisons

The Mwatana Organization for Human Rights has accused both sides in the civil war of arbitrary detentions, forced disappearances and torture over the past four years in detention centres.

Inmates can be seen in Sanaa on May 26, 2014.
Reuters

Inmates can be seen in Sanaa on May 26, 2014.

A Yemeni rights group has accused both sides in the country’s civil war of arbitrary detentions, forced disappearances and torture of hundreds of people in the past four years in unofficial detention centres across war-torn Yemen.

The Mwatana Organization for Human Rights said on Tuesday it documented over 1,600 cases of arbitrary detentions, 770 cases of forced disappearances, 344 cases of torture and at least 66 deaths in secret prisons run by the warring sides since April 2016.

The group released an 87-page report identifying at least 11 unofficial detention centres across Yemen where “torture and other forms of cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment are particularly prevalent”.

“The scale and severity of abuse ... has had significant societal impact,” it said. Many of the secret sites held people for lengthy periods, with the detainees’ families not knowing where their relatives were held until after their release or transfer to another detention, the group said.

Yemen’s conflict erupted late in 2014 when Iran-backed Houthi rebels swept across much of the north and seized the capital, Sanaa, forcing the internationally recognised government of President Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi into exile. 

The following year, Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states formed a coalition to take on the Houthis in what they said was an effort to stop Iran's growing sway in Yemen.

Loading...

Toll of war

The conflict has killed more than 100,000 people and created the world’s worst humanitarian disaster, with more than 3 million people internally displaced and two-thirds of the population relying on food aid for survival.

READ MORE: Much to Saudi Arabia's dismay, Houthis stand their ground in Yemen 

The report blamed the Houthis and militias trained and funded by the United Arab Emirates for the majority of the abuse. 

Forces loyal to the internationally recognised government were responsible for at least 65 cases of torture and over two dozen deaths in detention centres, the group said.

Interviews of detainees and lawyers

The report, titled, “In the darkness: abusive detention, disappearance and torture in Yemen’s unofficial prisons” was based on 2,566 interviews with former detainees, witnesses, relatives of detainees, activists, and lawyers, along with medical reports and photographic evidence, the group said.

Yemeni officials on both sides of the conflict did not answer calls on Tuesday seeking comment.

The group said over two dozen people died and around 140 were tortured in Houthi detention centres. The rebels used the security and intelligence agency in Sanaa and residential buildings in the city of Taiz as secret prisons where detainees were beaten and endured several kinds of torture, including having their nails ripped out and electric shocks.

Loading...

Tortured by groups backed by UAE and Iran

An investigation by The Associated Press in December 2018 showed that thousands of Yemenis were imprisoned by the Houthis, many suffering extreme torture such as being smashed in their faces with batons, being hung from chains by their wrists or genitals for weeks at a time, and scorched with acid.

In the southern port city of Aden, which is controlled by UAE-backed separatist militias, the rights group said the secessionist Southern Transitional Council used two underground halls and rooms at the counter-terrorism agency as a detention centre. Its report documented at least 18 cases of torture and two deaths at this secret prison.

The AP also in 2018 revealed that hundreds of Yemenis swept up in anti-terror raids by Emirati-backed forces have been subjected to torture and sexual abuse aimed at brutalizing the detainees and extracting “confessions” as part of a US-backed anti-terror campaign.

Route 6