Media freedom has continued to suffer setbacks in Yemen as a local center documented 61 media abuses in August alone.
In its fourth periodical report, the studies and economic media center said on Monday the media abuses included killings, injuries, arrests, intimidation of journalists as well as raids of journalists' homes and workplaces.
Moreover, websites and newspapers have been blocked, it said.
Houthi and pro-former president militants Saleh committed 85% of the violations, gunmen 13% and the legitimate government was responsible for 1%, it said.
With support from forces loyal to the former president, the Houthi militants ousted the government and seized power in late 2014. Liberties have since deteriorated after the Houthi takeover sparked a civil war which in turn deepened power vacuum.
52% of the media anuses occurred in the capital Sanaa and most of the others in Dhamar, Aden and Taiz, it added.
Press freedom has experienced the harshest crackdowns in two and a half decades, as media violations kept rising with journalists facing high risks that likely involve death, it remarked, the center said.
The report comes as many reporters are still abducted including 11 who were snatched by the Houthi militants several months ago.