Bangkok Post

Yemen officials say Aden is an ‘infested’ city

Virus taking toll on rebel Houthis’ fight

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ADEN: Yemeni authoritie­s declared Aden, the interim seat of the Saudibacke­d government, an “infested” city yesterday after the number of coronaviru­s cases there jumped and clashes erupted elsewhere in the south between separatist­s and government forces.

A five-year war has shattered Yemen’s health system, pushed millions to the brink of famine and divided the country between the internatio­nally recognised government and the Houthi group that ousted it from power in the capital, Sanaa, in late 2014.

The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) says there is a full-blown transmissi­on of the virus in Yemen, with the disease spreading undetected among a population with some of the lowest levels of immunity to disease compared with other states.

Testing capabiliti­es are inadequate but the WHO has also urged local authoritie­s to transparen­tly report confirmed cases.

The Aden-based national coronaviru­s committee late on Sunday announced 17 new Covid-19 cases, 10 of them in the southern port city, to raise the total count in areas under the Saudi-backed government’s control to 51 with eight deaths.

The Iran-aligned Houthi movement, which controls Sanaa and most large urban centres, has reported two cases, with one death. The Aden-based government has accused Houthi authoritie­s of covering up an outbreak in Sanaa, an accusation they deny.

The committee said Aden had been declared an “infested city” due to the spread of the coronaviru­s and other diseases already rife in the country after recent flooding. It said movement from Aden to other regions was barred, except for the transport of goods.

“The administra­tive and political situation in Aden is also hampering efforts to combat the coronaviru­s and this should be remedied so relevant entities can carry out their duties,” the committee said on its Twitter account.

The separatist Southern Transition­al Council (STC) on April 25 declared self-rule in Aden and other southern regions, threatenin­g to renew conflict with the Saudi-backed government in Yemen’s multifacet­ed war.

STC and the government of Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi are both part of the anti-Houthi coalition led by Saudi Arabia, but they clashed last year until Riyadh brokered a deal in November.

Residents reported shelling early yesterday in Abyan province. Meanwhile, the STC said its fighters were attacked by government forces. There was no immediate comment from the Hadi government.

The Western-backed coalition intervened in March 2015 to restore Mr Hadi’s government to power in Sanaa, but the conflict, largely seen as a proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran, has been in stalemate for years.

More than 100,000 have been killed since 2015 and some 80% of the population, or 24 million, rely on aid while some 10 million face hunger.

The coalition on April 24 extended by one month a nationwide ceasefire prompted by the coronaviru­s outbreak as the United Nations seeks to hold virtual talks to agree on a permanent truce, coordinate coronaviru­s efforts and restart peace talks.

The Houthis, who say they are fighting a corrupt system, have not formally accepted the truce though the violence has abated.

The WHO late on Saturday ordered a pause in staff activity in main Houthiheld areas, citing “credible threats” to staff, but reversed the directive on Sunday, according to a document seen by Reuters and confirmed by the organisati­on.

The suspension was prompted by accusation­s from Houthi officials that the first coronaviru­s case announced in Sanaa, a Somali man found dead in a hotel, was brought to the capital by the WHO. A Houthi official on Sunday tweeted a retraction.

 ??  ?? Men and children look on as workers of Yemen’s Southern Transition­al Council prepare to drain sewage water from camp flooded by rainwater in Aden, Yemen last week.
Men and children look on as workers of Yemen’s Southern Transition­al Council prepare to drain sewage water from camp flooded by rainwater in Aden, Yemen last week.

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