Houthi corruption network plunder 10 billion riyals per month from the Tax Authority revenues

Informed tax sources revealed a significant decline in the monthly tax proceeds of the administration of senior taxis in the kidnapped capital, Sana'a, which is controlled by the Houthi gang, "Iran's agents" in Yemen.
According to the sources, revenues have decreased from more than 50 billion riyals per month to only 40 billion riyals, which raises widespread questions about the fate of the difference, which is about 10 billion riyals, which is looted monthly by a corruption network window within the interest.
The sources indicated that this decline was not the result of economic conditions or a decrease in commercial activity, but rather because of the rampant corruption within the interest and its officials profit and facilitating tax corruption operations.
The sources describe what is going on within the Tax Authority as "a systematic dismantling of efficient management and converting revenues into a closed farm for influential people," stressing that specific personalities re -imposed their influence within the vital joints of the tax sector, and resumed blackmail and brokerage practices, at the expense of public money.
The numbers confirm that at least 10 billion riyals per month, which is the gap between the previous and the current link, is not supplied to the public treasury, but rather is managed outside the institutional frameworks, which indicates an organized corruption that needs transparent and urgent achievement.
This comes as the tax authority employees demand the supervisory and financial authorities in the areas of the Houthi gang control, and the local and international organizations concerned with integrity and transparency, the need to open a comprehensive investigation into the reasons for the decline in revenues, and to reveal the fate of the financial differences that are repeated every month without accountability or supervision.
Since its coup against the state and its control of its ethics, the Houthi gang continues to plunder the state’s financial resources, on top of which is tax revenues, and its direction to finance its leaders and private projects, including sectarian and propaganda activities, instead of spending them on public services and employees ’salaries.
According to observers, this systematic looting has transformed state institutions into an exclusive source of financing for the benefit of the gang and its influence centers.