Houthis الحوثيون |
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Participant in Houthi insurgency in Yemen, the Yemeni Revolution, the Yemeni Civil War and the Saudi-led intervention in Yemen | |
Active | 1994–present (armed since 2004) |
Ideology |
Zaydi Revivalism Anti-imperialism Anti-Zionism Antisemitism(officially rejected) |
Groups | Houthis, allied Zaidi tribes in Sa'dah |
Leaders | |
Headquarters | Sa'dah, Yemen |
Area of operations | |
Strength | 29,000 (2011) |
Allies |
State allies Non-state allies |
Opponents |
State opponents Other state opponents
Non-state opponents |
Battles and wars |
State allies
Non-state allies
State opponents
Non-state opponents
The Houthis (Arabic: الحوثيون al-Ḥūthiyyūn IPA: [ħuːθijuːn]), officially called Ansar Allah ( allāh أنصار الله "Supporters of God"), is a Zaidi Shia-led religious-political movement that emerged from Sa'dah, northern Yemen in the 1990s and has fought against the government of the ousted president Ali Abdullah Saleh on and off since 2004. In late 2014, Houthis fixed their relationship with the ousted president Ali Abdullah Saleh, and with his help, Houthis took control of the capital and much of the north.
Like many of Iranian-backed military militia such as Hezbollah, the Houthi movement attracts its Zaidi-Shia followers in Yemen by promoting regional political-religious issues in its media, including the overarching US-Israeli conspiracy and Arab "collusion". In 2003, the Houthi's slogan "God is great, death to the US, death to Israel, curse the Jews, and victory for Islam", became the group's trademark. Beside, the movement claims that it has some local-political agenda such as ending the economic under-development, political marginalization in Yemen, as well as seeking autonomy in only the areas where they are predominant not all of Yemen. Tension between the Houthis and the central government steadily grew in the 1990s, with war breaking out in 2004 with the group's founder, Hussein Badreddin al-Houthi, leading a rebellion against then President Ali Abdullah Saleh. The group is now led by Abdul-Malik al-Houthi, brother of the first leader, who was reportedly killed by Saleh's Yemeni army forces in 2004.