The Houthis consider the UN envoy an Israeli spy ... and so they dealt with him in Sanaa

“As an Israeli spy,” the Iranian Houthi militia dealt with the UN envoy to Yemen Hans Grendberg during his visit during the past four days in Sanaa.
Like the rest of the visits made by the UN envoy to Yemen, the Houthi leaders have reduced the meetings with the man, as well as the change of places of their holding from time to time, in fear of the UN official who the Houthis seen as an Israeli spy, as some Yemeni sources described in Sanaa .
The sources said: The envoy has not received any reception at the airport by the leaders who are keen to attend and highlight their presence as peace and the efforts of the United Nations, as is the case in many of the previous visits made by the man.
He explained that the man was transferred to the headquarters of the United Nations Office in Sana'a under heavy security guard. As well as setting strict security measures for his movements or Houthi personalities and leaders he will meet in Sanaa.
According to the sources: Several meetings of the man were identified with large Houthi personalities, including Mahdi Al -Mashat and others, but the places of meetings were changed from time to time, in fear of any security breakthroughs in the description of the militias.
explaining that the Houthis and the procedures that were followed with the UN envoy confirm that the militias consider it the spy of Israel and not an international envoy.
The sources pointed out: The meetings with the Houthi leaders were secret with large inspection procedures that were practiced before the meetings. Noting that the Houthi militias dealt in this way came after the publication of reports on the appointment of Sweden, the wife of the UN envoy to Yemen, Mr. Hans Grendberg, as an ambassador to Israel.
The militias fear the man’s visit at this moment came with the aim of taking sites, coordinates and places of the presence of the Houthi leaders to target them by Israeli aviation, according to some Houthi leaders who refused to attend meetings held by the envoy in Sana'a.
The UN envoy to Yemen, Hans Grendberg, the Yemeni capital, Sanaa, left three days after his arrival for it for the first time since May 2023.
The Houthi militia media did not indicate any meetings held by Grendberg with the leaders of the group's first row over the past three days, with the exception of a meeting with the Prime Minister in the unrecognized government of the group, and another meeting with the president of what is called the National Houthi Prisoners Affairs Committee.
Upon his arrival at the Yemeni capital airport on Monday, the UN envoy’s office stated, in a statement, that Grendberg’s visit to Sana'a comes after his meetings in the Omani capital, Muscat, with Omani officials, along with the spokesman for the Houthi group and its head of delegation, negotiating Mohamed Abdel Salam. p>
The office added that Grendberg's visit comes as part of its ongoing efforts to urge the Houthi group to take concrete and fundamental measures to push the peace process forward.
The statement indicated that the visit also aims to support the release of arbitrary detainees from United Nations employees, workers in NGOs, and civil society members, as well as members of diplomatic missions detained by the Houthi group since last June.