DUBAI — Entisar Al-Hammadi was just starting a career in modeling when she was arrested two months ago in Yemen’s rebel-held capital Sanaa, where the Houthis are enforcing a morals campaign.
اضافة اعلان
Born to an Ethiopian mother and Yemeni father, the 19-year-old had been pictured online in traditional dress as well as leather and denim jackets, and sometimes she went without a headscarf.
With her high cheekbones and piercing green eyes, Hammadi had several thousand followers on Instagram and Facebook where she posted sessions with local stylists and designers.
The Iran-backed Houthis, who seized the Yemeni capital from the government in 2014 and control much of the north, have not commented on her fate.
But Hammadi’s lawyer Khaled Al-Kamal said she was targeted for working in the fashion industry which the
Shiite rebels consider a violation of Islamic culture.
Hammadi was snatched on February 20 along with two other models and their friend who was driving them to a photo shoot, the lawyer told AFP.
“I still don’t know what she is accused of,” he said.
According to Kamal there have been attempts to defame the young woman, with unverified local reports alleging that she was involved in prostitution and drugs.
“The prosecution is trying to make it look like an act of gross indecency, claiming that my client has let out two strands of her hair out or was not wearing a hijab in a public space,” he said.
Yemeni society, although conservative, has traditionally allowed space for individual freedoms and cultivated an appreciation of music and leisure. But all that changed with the rise of the Houthis.
Morals crackdown
Hammadi’s detention follows a series of incidents in rebel-held areas that illustrate the Houthis’ determination to impose their own moral code on Yemenis who have been enduring years of grinding conflict.
Restaurants where men and women mingle have been shut down and reports say women have been harassed for wearing belts around their abaya robes, with rebels tearing them off, saying the silhouette they create is too “exciting”.
An investigation into Hammadi’s case was finally opened on April 21, her lawyer said, but the charges against her have not been clarified.
The friend who was driving her is being prosecuted for possession of hashish, he said, but the two cases have been separated.
Essentially, he said, the group was targeted because the Houthis “hate art and artists”.
“They are trying to accuse her of any crime because of her work, which the Houthis oppose.”
Kamal has reached out for support from civil society groups which have launched an online campaign under the hashtag #FreeEntisar.
“According to the Houthi vision, this issue is a moral one because they are an extremist religious group,” said Tawfik Al-Hamidi, head of the
SAM Organization for Rights and Liberties.
“Entisar’s activity and the field of fashion modeling is new in Yemen, and it is something the group cannot accept,” said the Vienna-based Yemeni human rights activist.
Violence and discrimination against Yemeni women and girls has worsened as a result of the war that has ravaged the country, leaving tens of thousands of people dead and millions pushed to the brink of famine.
Hamidi said the situation of women in Yemen — where Houthis are battling a government backed by a Saudi-led military coalition — is “catastrophic”, with all warring sides contributing to it in one way or another.
But it is worse under the Houthis, who have adopted an Iranian model of the Muslim moral code.
The rebels have targeted women in terms of economic rights,
freedom of movement, and exclusion from public sector jobs.
Read more Region & World