arista
23-08-2024, 11:47 AM
They are placing ads selling Guns
in Yemen on X
BBC security correspondent Frank Gardner
was just live on BBCnewsHD
He said it is not easy to get pages taken down
since it became X.
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/976/cpsprodpb/14c6/live/05dbd340-60be-11ef-8c32-f3c2bc7494c6.jpg.webp
[A file picture of an AK47 rifle and ammunition]
[Weapons dealers in Yemen are openly using
the social media platform X, formerly known
as Twitter, to sell Kalashnikovs, pistols,
grenades and grenade-launchers.
The traders operate in the capital Sana’a
and other areas under control of the
Houthis, a rebel group backed by
Iran and proscribed as terrorists by
the US and Australian governments.
"It is inconceivable that they
[the weapons dealers] are not operating
on the Houthis’ behalf," said the former
British Ambassador to Yemen,
Edmund Fitton-Brown, who now works
for the Counter Extremism Project.
"Purely private dealers who tried to profit from
supplying, [for example] the government of Yemen,
would be quickly shut down."
An investigation by The Times newspaper
found that several of the Yemeni accounts
bore the blue tick of verification. ]
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c86l4pl6072o
in Yemen on X
BBC security correspondent Frank Gardner
was just live on BBCnewsHD
He said it is not easy to get pages taken down
since it became X.
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/976/cpsprodpb/14c6/live/05dbd340-60be-11ef-8c32-f3c2bc7494c6.jpg.webp
[A file picture of an AK47 rifle and ammunition]
[Weapons dealers in Yemen are openly using
the social media platform X, formerly known
as Twitter, to sell Kalashnikovs, pistols,
grenades and grenade-launchers.
The traders operate in the capital Sana’a
and other areas under control of the
Houthis, a rebel group backed by
Iran and proscribed as terrorists by
the US and Australian governments.
"It is inconceivable that they
[the weapons dealers] are not operating
on the Houthis’ behalf," said the former
British Ambassador to Yemen,
Edmund Fitton-Brown, who now works
for the Counter Extremism Project.
"Purely private dealers who tried to profit from
supplying, [for example] the government of Yemen,
would be quickly shut down."
An investigation by The Times newspaper
found that several of the Yemeni accounts
bore the blue tick of verification. ]
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c86l4pl6072o