Scandal shakes the Ministry of Interior.. Haidan issues a decision to promote 39 brothers to senior ranks in Taiz “document”
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In a new and resounding scandal for the Muslim Brotherhood in Yemen, an official document revealed the involvement of the Minister of Interior, Major General Ibrahim Haidan - affiliated with the Islah Party - in promoting about forty Brothers in the Taiz police at once to different ranks.
The city of Taiz has been under the control of the Islah Brotherhood Party, since its liberation from the grip of the Iranian Houthi militia, as the group controls the military and security institutions in the city.
According to the official document, Minister Haidan took the absurd decision to promote 39 Brotherhood leaders in the police force in Taiz and give them high and middle ranks, distributed between first lieutenant and major, in violation of the law.
Haydan Resolution No. (21) of 2024 AD stipulated in its first article that (4) be promoted to the rank of major, one of whom had jumped from first lieutenant, so that he would pass a rank that he did not hold (captain), not to mention that one of those who was promoted to the rank of major was the son of Abdul Karim Shaiban.< /p>
Abdulkarim Sharaf Mohsen Shaiban is a member of the House of Representatives, from the Islah Brotherhood Party, and head of the government team negotiating the opening of Taiz’s roads.
The decision stipulated in its second article that (7) be promoted to the rank of captain. It is noteworthy that 5 of them (jumped) from the rank of second lieutenant, and only 2 were in the rank of first lieutenant.
Article Three of the same decision also stipulated the promotion of 28 Brotherhood members to the rank of first lieutenant.
It is noteworthy that most of these people occupy undeserved positions in the police force, including security directors and deputies, and police department directors and deputies.
It is noted that the decision deliberately excluded women, even though there is a distinguished cadre in the female police.
Observers considered Haidan's decision a crime requiring his referral to a disciplinary council, as he had violated the law when he limited the promotion process for members of the Brotherhood and subjected the position in the police force to political criteria.
It is clear that most of those included in the decision are leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood, which constitutes a burden on the police force now and in the future.