Kuwait Times

Displaced, scared: Yemenis still in limbo after five years of war

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KHAMIR, Yemen: Widow Samirah Nasser and her eight children tried to return to their Yemeni village but were forced by relentless air strikes to return to the relative safety of a refugee camp.

Shivering through yet another camp winter, she is one of 3.6 million Yemenis - around 12 percent of the population displaced during a nearly five-year war that has spawned what the United Nations says is the world’s most urgent humanitari­an crisis. “When we returned (to our village), planes were in the sky. They hit the market full of kids,” Nasser said. “I banned the children from going to school, fearing the warplanes.”

The air strikes have deterred Nasser over the past three years from attempting another return to her native region of Saada, heartland of the Iran-aligned Houthi movement that has been battling a Saudi-led military coalition since March 2015. “The war there does not stop. Our houses are destroyed, we don’t have anywhere to stay, nothing,” said

Houriya Muhammad, a 40-year-old mother-of-three also unable to return to Saada, where she used to sell pots. Both women now live in a refugee camp in Khamir, some 2.5 hours by road from the capital Sanaa. Life is very hard in the camps, where facilities are rudimentar­y.

“We are dying of the cold,” said Muhammad. “My kids and I sleep wedged together with three or four blankets on us.” Children, with runny noses, warm themselves near open fires. Water leaks through holes in the makeshift tents. The war in Yemen pits the Saudi-led coalition, backed by the West, against the Iran-aligned Houthis, who still control Sanaa and other major urban centres.

More than 100,000 people have been killed in the conflict, which has crippled basic services and infrastruc­ture and ravaged the economy. More than 11 million people struggle to find enough food, and 240,000 people are living in famine-like conditions, according to The World Food Programme (WFP).

Improvemen­ts

Nor are the refugee camps as safe as aid organizati­ons would want. “Fighting is taking place less than 10 kilometers (six miles) from some of the main camps,” said Sultana Begum of the Norwegian Refugee Council. People trying to reach safety can be hampered either by Yemen’s mountainou­s terrain or a lack of money and identifica­tion papers, Begum said.

Yemenis continue to be displaced from fresh conflict areas, with almost 400,000 people driven from their homes in 2019. But it is not all bad news. Food security has improved over the past year and the WFP now feeds 12 million people a month. Diplomatic initiative­s have led to a decrease in air strikes in recent months and a semblance of normality has returned to some larger cities. “We can sleep and our children can go to school without fear,” said Abd Rahman Shouei, 28, a resident of the major port city of Hodeidah who ekes out a living by washing cars. “True, there is no work, roads are closed and we have no electricit­y, but the situation in Hodeidah is better now because there is no fighting or bombing.”

 ?? —AFP ?? ADEN: Members of Yemen’s separatist Southern Transition­al Council (STC) recite a prayer at the start of a meeting of the council in the southweste­rn coastal city of Aden, on Monday.
—AFP ADEN: Members of Yemen’s separatist Southern Transition­al Council (STC) recite a prayer at the start of a meeting of the council in the southweste­rn coastal city of Aden, on Monday.

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