As factions fight, Yemenis suffer hunger, disease, fear
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As factions fight, Yemenis suffer hunger, disease, fear

As factions fight, Yemenis suffer hunger, disease, fear

Cut off from the world, caught between the fighting by Saudi-led coalition and rebels, Yemen’s 25 million people are prey to hunger, disease and a fear of death.

Gulf Business

Eight-year-old Abdullah Musleh lay screaming in pain in a Sanaa hospital on Wednesday as a doctor cleaned his torn face, the victim of a worsening war that threatens millions of Yemenis with starvation and homelessness.

“We were at home when air strikes hit the missile base on the mountain near our house,” Abdullah’s father Ali said by his bedside, describing an air raid on an arms depot a month ago that sent missiles raining across part of Yemen’s capital.

“Shells from the base started flying over the houses. We tried to make our escape but, when we were in the street, a piece of shrapnel hit my son. Thank God the doctors were able to remove it, but he needs more help.”

A country that was already by far the poorest and most unstable on the Arabian Peninsula is now, after three months of conflict, in the grip of a humanitarian disaster.

Cut off from the world, living under bombardment from a Saudi-led coalition and beset by fighting between multiple battalions and militias, Yemen’s 25 million people are prey to hunger, disease and an ever-present fear of death.

“The most terrifying thing, worse than anything we’ve suffered in this war, is the indiscriminate shelling that falls on us every day,” said Saleh Hashem, a retired teacher from Aden.

In war-torn districts of the southern port city, mountains of rubbish fester in heat of over 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit), helping to fuel an outbreak of dengue fever that has infected over 3,000 people nationwide, according to the United Nations.

TANKS AND SNIPERS

Snipers flit across rooftops and tanks heave into the abandoned streets, spitting out shells seemingly around the clock as residents huddle indoors.

“You don’t know where it will come from, and you know it could kill you and your family any moment, just as it kills women and children every single day,” Hashem said.

When Yemen’s now-dominant Houthi movement advanced toward Aden in late March, a Saudi-led alliance of Arab states began bombing in a bid to restore the elected president, who is backed by Saudi Arabia and has fled to Riyadh.

While the intervention held up the Houthi advance, it failed to push the militia back again, leaving large numbers of civilians trapped between battle lines across southern Yemen.

The Houthis say their advance is part of a revolution against a corrupt government and against Islamic militants.

Saudi Arabia, determined to thwart any arms deliveries to the Houthis, has imposed a near total blockade on a country heavily reliant on imports, reducing supplies of food, fuel and medicine to a trickle. Some families are breaking their daily fast for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan – meant to be a time of joy and plenty – with rice, bread and canned fish.

And, after a wave of deadly car bomb attacks claimed by ISIL on mosques in Sanaa, many of the faithful in the capital say their prayers at home.

Three thousand have perished in the war, over a million have fled their homes and more than half of the population do not have reliable access to food, according to U.N figures.

“Yemen is also dependent on imports for 90 per cent of its food. What food and fuel does make it in is then not being distributed to where it is needed, because it is blocked by fighting on the ground,” Britain’s international development secretary, Justine Greening, said this week.

RISK OF STARVATION

“Thousands of Yemenis have already lost their lives in this latest wave of violence – but millions more are at risk of starving by the end of the year.”

With half of Yemen’s population under 18, the trauma of war is taking an especially heavy toll on children.

Jets swooping low and anti-aircraft guns blazing from civilian neighbourhoods elicit little screams from inside homes, and parents complain that their small children are rendered variously distant and silent or hysterical by the constant blasts.

For the nearly 16,000 people wounded in the conflict, there is little chance of proper medical treatment.

“If a child is wounded, a number of horrendous obstacles stands in the way of getting him treated,” Jeremy Hopkins of the U.N. children’s fund UNICEF said in Sanaa.

“The lack of fuel makes getting to a hospital very difficult, as gas is so scarce that queues at gas stations are three deep and several kilometres long.

“If they actually get to a health centre, there may be no fuel to run it, there may be no drugs because they’re not coming into the country. And hospitals are understaffed,” he said.

Hisham Abdul Aziz is homeless after rockets missed an army base in the capital Sanaa and hit his house instead. Sending his family to the countryside for their safety, he stays on alone, disconsolate, to go to work.

“Everything in the house has been destroyed,” he said. “After the war stops, I’ll need so much time and money to get back to where I was. Nothing’s left in Yemen that hasn’t been destroyed.”


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