The Asian Age

52 wounded in Yemen war reach India for treatment

- SANJIB KR BARUAH

In what can yield a bountiful harvest of goodwill for India in West Asia, 52 warwounded Yemenis, including soldiers and civilians, landed in New Delhi on Thursday for medical treatment.

The physically battered and mentally traumatise­d patients, including a four- year- old boy who has lost has eye due to blast shrapnel, are mostly from Aden where fighting between the government forces loyal to President Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi and the Houthi rebels continues to be fierce.

A source entrusted with the logistics of the developmen­t told this newspaper, “The patients brought to Delhi will undergo treatment at the VPS Rockland Hospital where they will be attended by an expert team of doctors and staff from various department­s such as orthopedic­s, neurosurge­ry, general surgery, plastic and

ophthalmic surgery.” Medical treatment of the Yemeni warwounded in India started last year under an initiative of the United Arab Emirates government, the Red Crescent and a private healthcare company.

Till now, four batches of the war- wounded have already been successful­ly treated and sent back to Yemen. In all, including the latest batch of 52 who are being accompanie­d by 22 of their relatives and attendants, 244 wounded have been successful­ly treated or are undergoing treatment.

The Yemen civil war started in 2015 and has reportedly claimed about 60,000 lives till now while displacing more than 30 lakh people.

In an evacuation effort of epic proportion­s in the first half of April 2015, India successful­ly transporte­d about 5,600 people — 4,640 Indian citizens and 960 foreign nationals — to safety from war- torn Yemen under Operation Raahat. The Indian Navy is actively deployed in anti- piracy operations in the Gulf of Aden, a key shipping route near the southern tip of the Red Sea between Somalia and Yemen.

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