Yemen war vexes even the dead
sanaa — Famine and disease haunt the living, but not even the dead are spared the calamities of Yemen’s two-year-old civil war.
Ancient mummies are withering away in a major museum for lack of electricity and preservative chemicals from abroad — a sign that the conflict is harming not only the country’s present and future but also its rich past. The dozen spindly corpses, curled into the fetal position or swaddled in baskets, belong to a lost pagan civilisation around 2-1/2 millennia ago.
Lying beneath glass panes within the archaeology department in the capital Sanaa’s main university, the mummies might have spent their eternal slumber blissfully unaware of the otherworldly warplanes pounding their homeland.
A Saudi-led military coalition has carried out thousands of air strikes in a bid to dislodge Yemen’s armed Houthi movement from the capital. The conflict has killed at least 10,000 people and unleashed a humanitarian crisis.
But a timeless enemy, abetted by the disorder of war, threatens the mummies’ repose. “The mummies have started to decay and are infected with bacteria. This is because we don’t have electricity and the machines that are supposed to maintain them,” said Abdelrahman Jarallah, head of the university’s anitiquities department.
The coalition’s closure of Sanaa airport and a near-blockade over a key Red Sea port — aimed at stopping weapons shipments — have cut off imports of specialty goods like the chemicals needed to ward off the microscopic menace. —