Houthi Group Allegedly Coerces Ibb Students into Summer Camps Through Academic Threats
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2 hours ago
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Activists and local educational sources in Yemen's Ibb Governorate have revealed alleged coercive practices employed by Houthi militias, utilizing affiliated personnel within schools to compel male and female students to enroll in the group's mandated summer centers. According to these sources, students are reportedly being threatened with failure, expulsion from school, or the withholding of their academic results if they refuse to participate in these activities. Conversely, students struggling academically are allegedly being offered guaranteed success contingent upon their enrollment in these centers. These actions have reportedly generated significant concern and resentment among parents, who now face difficult decisions between yielding to the pressure or preventing their children from attending the camps, acknowledging the potential resulting academic repercussions. Educational professionals contend that such measures constitute a clear violation of the educational process, representing the politicization of the education sector for non-academic objectives, which ultimately jeopardizes students' futures and the overall quality of education within the governorate. These developments align with recurring patterns where Houthi militias exploit educational institutions under their control to disseminate programs and activities with distinct sectarian undertones, prompting renewed calls for an immediate cessation of these practices to safeguard the neutrality of the educational system. |