The National - News

UAE ship brings aid relief for Aden

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ADEN // A UAE aid ship was able to dock safely in Aden yesterday now that Houthi rebels have been driven out of the city.

The vessel carrying 2,315 tonnes of medical aid was joined by a UN World Food Programme ship with 4,700 tonnes of food and pharmaceut­ical aid. Oil also arrived at the port for the city’s refinery.

Aid chiefs had tried repeatedly in the past few weeks to deliver relief to Aden but were unable to do so after rebels overran the city. “This is a major breakthrou­gh for our humanitari­an response,” WFP regional director Muhannad Hadi said. “While we have been able to reach several areas of southern Yemen by land, docking at the port of Aden allows us to accelerate our response to meet urgent needs.”

Over the past week, forces loyal to exiled president Abdrabu Mansur Hadi have recaptured most of Aden from the Iranian-backed rebels and their renegade military allies.

The loyalist advances were backed by air strikes by the Saudi-led Arab coalition that began a bombing campaign against the rebels in late March.

A UAE technical team arrived on Monday to repair the tower and passenger terminal at Aden internatio­nal airport, heavily damaged in clashes before rebels were driven out.

Late last week the exiled prime minister Khaled Bahah declared the city liberated, although rebel pockets have fought on in some districts. On the ground in and around Aden, fighting continued. Battles just east of the city killed about 20 rebels and 10 loyalists.

Coalition aircraft launched dozens of raids north of Aden, destroying tanks and Katyusha rocket launchers.

The governor of Aden, Nayef Al Bakri, said Hadi loyalist forces and local allies had now taken full control of the city, and that authoritie­s were working to restore basic utilities. Rebel bombardmen­t on Sun- day killed 57 civilians in the northern Aden suburb of Dar Saad, according to local health chief Al Khader Laswar.

The rebels still control much of the country, helped by forces loyal to the ousted president Ali Abdullah Saleh.

In rebel-controlled Sanaa, a car bombing by ISIL militants near a Shiite mosque on Monday killed four people.

ISIL have carried out a string of fatal attacks against Shiite targets in Yemen since March.

The Houthis, who overran Sanaa last September, also lost 11 fighters in other attacks in the capital on Monday.

Six were killed in a shooting at a checkpoint near the central bank and five more in a car bombing at a police station. In the south-eastern province of Hadramawt, the Emirates Red Crescent handed out gifts to 5,000 displaced Yemeni children in celebratio­n of Eid Al Fitr. The Emirati humanitari­an agency gave out electronic toys, sweets and painting tools to children affected by the war and now living in makeshift shelters. The Red Crescent has been providing basic educationa­l, health and social services for children affected by the conflict.

A humanitari­an ceasefire declared by the United Nations this month failed to take hold. The WFP had described the truce as the “final hope” to deliver aid.

The WFP sent aid before the truce to the rebel- controlled port of Hodeidah in western Yemen, but the insurgents did not allow an aid convoy to travel to Aden. The UN had warned then that the impoverish­ed country was just “one step away from famine”.

More than 21.1 million people – more than 80 per cent of Yemen’s population – are in need of aid, with 13 million facing food shortages and 9.4 million with no direct access to water.

The conflict has killed more than 3,640 people since late March, according to the UN.

 ?? Courtesy Wam ?? A UAE aid ship and a UN World Food Programme vessel yesterday brought desperatel­y-needed humanitari­an relief to Aden.
Courtesy Wam A UAE aid ship and a UN World Food Programme vessel yesterday brought desperatel­y-needed humanitari­an relief to Aden.

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