The National - News

Children in Yemen crossfire

With the second largest civilian arms ownership – more than one weapon for every two Yemenis – but lax regulation, innocent children pay the price in gunshot wounds. Mohammed Al Qalisi, Foreign Correspond­ent, reports

- foreign.desk@thenationa­l.ae With additional reporting by Mona Mohammed and Reuters

TAEZ // It was a moment that changed her life for ever. Suad Al Masani, now 17, was standing on the roof of her family’s home in Bani Masan area, about 70 kilometres from Taez city, last winter when a stray bullet struck her left shoulder. The shot was fired from nearby farmland and severed nerves which left her disabled. Her sister and mother, who were with her at that time, did not hear the gunshot and only realised Suad had been hit when they saw her blood-soaked clothes. “When I saw my daughter bleeding, I bound her shoulder with my scarf and shouted to her father to take her to hospital,” Suad’s mother, Fatima, said .

Suad had passed out by then, she said. “We took her to Khalifa hospital in Al Turbah town, 10 kilometres from our house, and after more than an hour Suad regained consciousn­ess and a doctor told us that she would never walk again.” Yemen is one of the most heavily-armed countries in the world, with the second-largest civilian firearms ownership exceeding one weapon for every two citizens, according to the Small Arms Survey 2007. There are between 40 to 60 million weapons circulatin­g in Yemen, estimated the UN Security Council in 2015.

In Yemen, guns are frequently fired at weddings and celebratio­ns, and used for hunting and defence. They are also a symbol of power, wealth and manhood.

Today, more than a year after the accident, Suad is confined to a wheelchair inside her home and has stopped attending school.

“I am tired of being in the house and I hope to go to school again, enjoy the view from the housetop and outside in the fields, but I can hardly move to the living room and I try not to bother my mother,” she said.

After two months of investigat­ion, police found that the alleged shooter was a 16-year-old boy also from the Bani Masan area of Taez province.

“One of our neighbour’s children said that on that day when Suad was shot, he [the accused] was trying to hunt a hare in a field near our house, and he was shooting wildly to hunt the hare, but instead he shot a girl,” said Fatima.

Fatima said that, because he was a child, the family decided to forgive him. The boy’s family has been helping with the cost of her treatment.

Suad’s case is not unique. There have been several instances of stray bullets killing civilians at wedding parties in the past year, including a young girl who was shot in August. Manar Yasser Badhanwi was hit during a wedding in the Fowah area of Al Mukallah in Hadramawt province and died days later.

Yemen’s gun control legislatio­n has not been updated since 1992. The law banned the carrying of firearms in major cities, but was not enforced until 2007. However, the law does not designate what official body is to ensure the control of arms proliferat­ion.

Before the start of the war in 2015, the interior ministry seized weapons from civilians who did not have permission to own them. Yemenis tried to avoid carrying weapons at that time, but that is no longer the case.

“Nowadays, there is no punishment for carrying weapons,” said Naef Ibrahim, a social expert in the government education office in Taez. “So many people are moving with their Kalashniko­vs, and this is the main reason for the increase in the number of victims of stray bullets. I think that the government has to revive the law of regulating the carrying of guns to decrease the casualties from stray bullets.”

Parents must be held responsibl­e for their children’s wrong ideas and behaviour about weapons, said Mr Ibrahim.

He stressed the need for parents to prevent their children from getting hold of weapons.

“There have to be education campaigns about the dangers of weapons for parents, not children, as parents consider this to be an aspect of manhood, and this is a wrong thinking that is from the past,” he said.

An unnamed arms trader said that there are no obstacles for the trade these days. Anyone can own weapons if they want to, he said, adding that “many children come to sell and buy weapons from me and this has became a normal thing nowadays”.

In Yemen, guns are a symbol of power, wealth and manhood

 ?? Khaled Abdullah / Reuters ?? Weapons such as these in a Houthi parade in Sanaa have caused civilian casualties after falling into the wrong hands.
Khaled Abdullah / Reuters Weapons such as these in a Houthi parade in Sanaa have caused civilian casualties after falling into the wrong hands.

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