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Yemen officials: Houthi militia ban on banknotes stops government salaries

Officials in Sanaa said the Houthi militia had given residents a month to hand over the newly printed but banned banknotes or face penalties that include jail. (File/AFP)
Officials in Sanaa said the Houthi militia had given residents a month to hand over the newly printed but banned banknotes or face penalties that include jail. (File/AFP)
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01 Jan 2020 02:01:59 GMT9
01 Jan 2020 02:01:59 GMT9
  • Houthis refuse to work with Yemeni rials that its central bank printed in past 3 years
  • The militia’s move paralyzed most banking activities in areas under Houthi control

SANAA: Yemeni officials said on Tuesday that a militia group’s ban on recently-printed government banknotes in areas under their control, including the capital, Sanaa, has held up the salaries of tens of thousands of civil servants and pensioners.

The officials and the internationally recognized government said the militia, known as Houthis, refused to work with the Yemeni rials that its central bank had printed in the past three years.

The Iran-backed Houthis control most of the country’s north, after more than five years of a stalemated civil war. An Arab coalition backs the internationally recognized government which still rules southern Yemen, including its interim capital, Aden, where its Central Bank is located.

The fighting in the Arab world’s poorest country has killed over 100,000 people and left millions suffering from food and medical shortages. The conflict has also pushed the country to the brink of famine.

The finance ministry said the militia’s move paralyzed most banking activities in areas under Houthi control, depriving tens of thousands of people, including around 40,000 pensioners, of desperately needed payments this month.

Officials in Sanaa said the Houthis had given residents a month to hand over the newly printed but banned banknotes or face penalties that include jail. The Houthi militia said they would compensate them with old currency or an electronic rial they have created, they added.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief the media.

They said banks and shops in Houthi-controlled areas have refused to use the banned banknotes. Residents have resorted to trading in the Yemeni rial with the Saudi Arabian rial and the UN dollar before entering the Houthi-controlled areas to avoid being arrested, the officials said.

AP

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