The National - News

UAE rebuilds 64 schools in Yemen hit by war

Another 20 schools being reconstruc­ted, along with other forms of infrastruc­ture

- Mohammed Al Qalisi Foreign Correspond­ent foreign.desk@thenationa­l.ae

ADEN // The Emirates Red Crescent has rebuilt 64 schools in the war-ravaged Yemeni province of Aden, along with health, sewerage, water and electricit­y facilities.

Another 20 schools are still in the process of being rebuilt, while the organisati­on expects to sign contracts to begin work on 26 others in the next three days, the Red Crescent’s Aden representa­tive, Brigadier General Abdullah Al Dhaheri, told The Na

tional yesterday. He said it would cost the charity Dh26.3 million to rebuild these 26 schools.

In total, 154 schools in Aden were damaged or completely destroyed in four months of heavy fighting between pro- government forces and Houthi rebels that began in March.

Brig Gen Al Dhaheri said the 44 remaining damaged schools were still housing displaced residents and so rebuilding work could not begin until they were able to leave.

The southern province was liberated by pro-government forces backed by the Saudi Arabia-led coalition in July.

Since then, the charity has led efforts to rebuild Aden’s severely damaged infrastruc­ture. It is also working to rebuild the Republican Palace in Aden city, which was the home of Yemeni president Abdrabu Mansur Hadi before he was forced to flee the country when fighting broke out in the province in March. The palace was damaged during Houthi and coalition air strikes in the early stages of the conflict.

Meanwhile, Brig Gen Al Dhaheri said the Red Crescent has provided Aden’s cleaning office with four cars and several trucks, and would be sending them another 160 cars, 1,600 trucks and four lorries in the next two weeks.

The organisati­on has also paid six months’ worth of salaries to employees of Aden’s water office and provided the body with 45 water pumps at a cost of Dh22.7m, he said. This has enabled the office to restore water supply to all the city’s residents from August.

A one-megawatt electricit­y gen- erator and 14 small generators provided by the charity have also helped to restore electricit­y to the province, Brig Gen Al Dhaheri said, adding that this was a temporary measure until the organisati­on could repair Aden’s electricit­y grid.

Outside of Aden, the charity has also distribute­d nine 420-megawatt generators to Lahj, Dalea and Abyan provinces.

Republic Hospital, the main hospital in Aden city, has been rebuilt by the organisati­on at a cost of Dh1.3m, Brig Gen Al Dhaheri said, while it has also rebuilt 30 pharmacies across the province at a cost of Dh337,000, along with nine clinics, costing Dh2m.

However, Brig Gen Al Dhaheri said the most important health facility rebuilt by his organisati­on was a kidney dialysis centre, which serves 460 patients, some of whom had been forced to leave Aden for treatment.

The charity has also rebuilt specialist units at hospitals across the city, including a cancer centre, a prosthetic­s centre and two maternity centres.

In addition to this rebuilding work, the charity has also distribute­d a total of 130,096 food baskets containing wheat, rice, milk and cooking oil, in Aden, Lahj, Abyan, Shabwah and Taez provinces.

Esam Al Shaeri, undersecre­tary of the Aden-based Sah Foundation for Defending Rights and Freedoms, said that as a result of the charity’s work in Aden, the province’s residents now considered the UAE to be their second country.

“The Emirates not only participat­ed in the liberation of Aden, it is also the only country that worked hard to resume regular life in Aden city by rebuilding the schools and hospitals, and providing the institutio­ns with different kinds of support,” he said. Mr Al Shaeri added that he hoped the UAE would also rebuild the damaged and destroyed homes of Aden’s residents.

Meanwhile, at least 11 Houthis and eight pro-government fighters were killed in coalition air strikes and clashes in Yemen’s south on Friday, military sources said. The night-time air strikes targeted two rebel vehicles on a road linking the central province of Ibb to Dalea further south, they said, while pro-government forces clashed with the Houthis and allied renegade army units on the outskirts of Damt, Dalea’s second-largest city.

In Saudi Arabia, a woman and her three-month-old baby were killed in the southern city of Najran on Friday when a shell fired from Yemen hit their home, the UAE state news agency Wam reported yesterday.

 ?? Reuters ?? In total, 154 schools in Aden were damaged or destroyed in four months of heavy fighting between government forces and rebels.
Reuters In total, 154 schools in Aden were damaged or destroyed in four months of heavy fighting between government forces and rebels.

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