Ansarollah website_Report
In a long, wound-ridden Arab night, September 21 dawned in Yemen as a watershed moment that rewrote the history of an entire nation. A revolution not born of a whim or a desire for superficial change, but rather emerged from the depths of suffering and an utmost national necessity. The country was being driven toward the abyss, controlled by a foreign remote control, its sovereignty and decision-making being stripped away in front of the eyes of its people. The American ambassador had become the de facto ruler, while local leaders were content to serve as "representatives" of foreign influence.
Yemen Before the Revolution: A Shackled Nation
The scene before September 21 was bleak by all standards: foreign tutelage was declared and explicit, under Chapter 7, and foreign ambassadors held the real decision. The country's situation prior to September 21 was realy catastrophic, tragic, and extremely dangerous. It was a situation in which the enemies were planning to push us, as Yemenis, into the abyss of our own free will, and to bring the country to official and public submission under Chapter VII, under which the country was officially subjected to foreign guardianship. The ambassadors of the ten countries in Sana'a—headed by the American ambassador—were the primary stakeholders in all the country's affairs, before any Yemeni party. The American ambassador was consulted on all the country's affairs by all responsible parties in state institutions. Is it normal for us, as Yemeni people, to accept the continuation of this situation, with the American ambassador and his fellow ambassadors deciding everything about our affairs, charting our future, and being the ones controlling our present and future? On what basis? First, in light of our identity and affiliation, the American ambassador and his entourage certainly did not consider our identity or affiliation in the nature of their decisions and plans. Second, in light of our national rights as an independent country, with all the rights that entail as an independent people and country. This includes the fact that foreign countries have no right to interfere in our internal affairs. Indeed, the interference of those countries in our internal affairs, as it existed at that time, is considered a violation of our country's sovereignty and independence, and an affront to the dignity of our people, according to international norms.
The economy is collapsing, and international indicators describe Yemen as on the brink of bankruptcy. Security is at its lowest ebb, assassinations are striking the heart of the capital, and chaos is raging throughout. National unity is threatened, and regionalization and federalism projects are being marketed as "magic" solutions, while they are actually the gateway to disintegration and fragmentation.
The Yemenis were not people of diverse identities or ethnically conflicting, but rather a homogeneous people united by faith, language, and history. However, external powers sought to turn minor differences into fuel for endless conflict, and divisions into a path to weakening the country and transforming it into weak cantons.
Revolution: A Historical Inevitability
In the face of this tragic situation, September 21 was not just a choice, but a national and existential necessity. The masses, with all their affiliations, took to the streets, chanting with one voice: No more guardianship. The revolutionary movement was not limited to a sect, tribe, or region; rather, it reflected a comprehensive popular consensus that expressed the collective conscience of Yemenis yearning for freedom and sovereignty.
The movement was in the interest of all Yemenis. It was a powerful, effective, and influential movement that restored the Yemeni people's dignity and demonstrated that they could not be transformed into a people tamed by foreign guardianship and control by their enemies, nor could they be subjected to the control of their enemies by any other party. So that they could crush, humiliate, subjugate, and destroy it, while it remained submissive, and surrendering, doing nothing, saying nothing, and taking no action. It is a people still living its Islamic, national, and humanitarian vitality. It is still a people with feelings and dignity. When its dignity was wounded, it became angry, refused to accept, and acted with pride.
In those days, the Yemeni people wrote an exceptional epic: the sit-in camps were filled with faces from all regions. Convoys of tribal generosity nourished the crowds with a spirit of solidarity and pride. The military and security establishment sided with the people, preserving the peaceful nature of the movement and preventing a slide into chaos.
The result was a unique revolution that astonished the world: no banks were looted, no institutions were destroyed, but rather the scene was transformed into a picture of unprecedented popular discipline, astonishing observers and commanding respect even from its opponents.
After the Revolution: Challenges and Confrontations
The road was not paved with roses after the revolution's victory. Foreign and regional powers rushed to conspire against the people. The Peace and Partnership Agreement was signed as an opportunity to build a unified state, but the guardianship forces worked to sabotage it and overthrow it, culminating in the direct foreign aggression, which continues to this day.
Nevertheless, the revolution created a new reality: it restored Yemen's reputation as a nation that refuses to be subjugated. It unleashed the people's energies in the fields of steadfastness and military manufacturing. It sent a resounding message: Yemen is neither ruled from embassies nor administered by guardianship.
Conversely, the scene in the south and east, under the control of the occupying power, reveals the true nature of foreign objectives: the absence of a state and the transformation of cities into militia cantons. Oil and gas resources are being plundered and presented on a golden platter to foreigners. Strategic islands are being transformed into military bases serving the projects of US and "Israel."
The Significance and Messages of the Revolution
September 21 Revolution is not just an anniversary; it is a symbol of dignity and determination, and a message that says: Peoples who cling to their freedom will not be crushed. Religion and humanity impose dignity, not slavery. Sacrifices, no matter how big, are always more profitable than the loss of surrender. Therefore, this revolution is not merely a milestone in the past; it is an ongoing project, reminding generations of the duty to defend identity and sovereignty, and making every anniversary an incentive to continue on the path.
September 21 Revolution was born out of necessity, to be the voice of the oppressed in the face of tyranny, a cry of freedom in the face of guardianship, and a shield of sovereignty against dismantling projects. It is not just a page in the history book;
Rather, it is the pulse of the present and the future, and the title of a nation that has decided to tell the world: This is Yemen, it kneels only to Allah.
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