China Daily

Displaced families stranded in Yemeni city

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SANAA — Thousands of families arrived on Saturday in the rebel-held capital Sanaa, after fleeing military confrontat­ions between pro-government forces and armed rebels in Yemen’s Hodeidah port city.

The displaced families were received by local authoritie­s in Abu Bakr al-Sideek school, an empty school along the Hodeidah-Sanaa road in the western part of Sanaa.

Wearing in traditiona­l black abaya and niqab, hundreds of women stand in a long line at the state-owned school to register as internally displaced people, or IDPs, to receive aid and allowed along with their husbands and children into the classrooms.

Some families fled their homes in the village of al-Manzar and al-Durayhemi district, about 10 kilometers south of Hodeidah airport, while some escaped from the center of Hodeidah city for fears of an immediate military attack.

It took three hours until authoritie­s permitted journalist­s to enter the school and interview the families.

Families who arrived earlier this week, have already given classrooms, while dozens of registered families sit on the dirt in the school’s courtyard awaiting for the authoritie­s to accommodat­e them.

‘We lost everything’

An official said on condition of anonymity that the displaced families should first register their names and the places they escape from. Then they would be distribute­d in the school or other schools in the capital.

“No exact number of the Hodeidah IDPs has been yet available, as many families are still arriving,” he said.

Anwar Mohammed Abkar, his wife and their four children managed to flee from al-Manzar village three days ago. It took them two days of walking into Hodeidah city, where they stayed for one day, and on Saturday they arrived in Sanaa.

“First, we moved to an urban area in the eastern edge of Hodeidah city, where we stayed for one day and the authoritie­s there (rebels) told us we should leave because the Saudi-led coalition could wage airstrikes on this area or possibly launch a ground attack,” Abkar said.

Abkar has already registered his family in the school and is sitting on the ground at the campus waiting to be accommodat­ed to an empty classroom.

“I have spent all my money on the travel, and now I wait for the authoritie­s here and humanitari­an aid agencies to give us food and water,” he said.

Abdullah Hassn Mahdi escaped from Hanak area south of Hodeidah airport along with his wife and three children, and arrived on Saturday in Sanaa and is awaiting to be accommodat­ed in a classroom.

“My wife is sick with cancer, and we are very tired. We lost everything. I hope war end soon, so we can go back home,” Mahdi said.

“All night, all day, sounds of fighter jets, airstrikes and heavy machine guns terrified us and forced us to flee home,” he said.

 ?? KHALED ABDULLAH / REUTERS ?? A boy displaced by the fighting in the Red Sea port city of Hodeidah queues with his mother to register in a school allocated for refugeesin Sanaa, Yemen, on Saturday.
KHALED ABDULLAH / REUTERS A boy displaced by the fighting in the Red Sea port city of Hodeidah queues with his mother to register in a school allocated for refugeesin Sanaa, Yemen, on Saturday.

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