Disputes between Houthi leaders in Sanaa escalated

Disputes have intensified among the leaders of the Iran-backed Houthis, and have culminated in mutual arrests between the Houthi leaders, interspersed with threats of eliminations.
 
Private sources told Khabar Agency that the Houthis have internal disputes among their leaders in the so-called Preventive Security Agency, in addition to leaders in the Ministries of Defense and Interior, in addition to disputes affecting the so-called Security and Intelligence Agency, all of which came after the meetings of the delegations of Houthis from Saada and Saudi Arabia.
 
According to the sources, the past week witnessed a campaign of mutual arrests among the members of the so-called Preventive Security, as the number of detainees from the Houthi parties to the conflict reached more than 40 abductees, and those disputes were raised to the office of the leader of the Houthis Abdul-Malik al-Houthi.
 
The disputes even affected the Ministries of Education and Higher Education, especially after the revelation of millions of riyals of corruption among university presidents and cases of forgery and exchange of bribes between militia leaders, which led to changes and exclusion of the presidents of some universities, such as the universities of Ibb and Dhamar. The sources said.
 
The sources said that the Houthi Ministry of Education had made a number of changes between the directors of a number of sectors in the ministry and education offices in a number of governorates, and this was due, as claimed, to the existence of internal betrayal and dealing with Houthi leaders outside the ministry.
 
The Houthis are also in the process of making new changes in the police stations and security departments in their coontrolled-areas, in addition to other measures in the Houthi Preventive Security Service, after a few days of appointments and changes in the so-called security, intelligence and judiciary apparatus.
 
Khabar Agency said in previous reports that the Houthi disputes had expanded between leaders in the capital Sana'a, which rose to reach Abdul Karim Amir Al-Din al-Houthi, appointed as Minister of Interior, and Abdul Hakim Al-Khaiwani, appointed as head of the Security and Intelligence Service, and it even reached to the judiciary apparatus and the director of the Al-Mashat office, Ahmed Hamed.