Rome News-Tribune

Are the Saudis getting the message: Stop starving civilians

- From the Chicago Tribune

Saudi Arabia has been using starvation to squeeze Yemen. The Saudi regime stepped up its air, land and sea siege of the war-ravaged Middle East nation in the last two weeks. The global reaction has been harsh. And Wednesday brought news that the Saudis, who aspire to a greater role in geopolitic­s, just might be getting the message: Stop punishing Yemeni civilians.

The Saudi regime said it would reopen Yemen’s internatio­nal airport in the capital, Sanaa, as well as a primary Red Sea port, so that humanitari­an aid could flow into the war-wracked nation.

That’s a step in the right direction, though we hope it amounts to a genuine — and not temporary — reprieve for a population struggling to survive.

Internatio­nal relief groups say up to 7 million Yemenis are on the brink of famine. Cholera has stricken at least 900,000 people. More than a quarter of those victims are children under 5. Nearly 400,000 Yemeni children need treatment for severe malnutriti­on — treatment they haven’t been getting because of the blockade, according to Save the Children, an internatio­nal relief group.

That created desperatio­n in a country heavily dependent on imports of food, medicine and fuel. The Saudis had been allowing a trickle of relief through the port of Aden, but U.N. aid groups say it hasn’t been nearly enough.

Yemen has been in the throes of civil war since the spring of 2015. From the conflict’s start, the Saudi regime, which opposes Yemen’s Shiite Houthi rebels, has intervened on behalf of the country’s ousted Sunni leadership.

Trump hasn’t seemed fazed by recent examples of Saudi recklessne­ss: An attempt earlier this year to isolate Qatar in retaliatio­n for what Riyadh claims is Doha’s linkage with Iran; the regime’s purge of more than 200 princes, businessme­n, officers and officials; a wave of arrests widely seen as a consolidat­ion of power rather than an anti-corruption initiative; and Riyadh’s meddling in Lebanon, where the prime minister has stepped down — at the Saudi regime’s behest, many in Lebanon believe — from a coalition government that included politician­s from the Iran-allied militant group Hezbollah. On Wednesday, Prime Minister Saad Hariri said he was putting his resignatio­n on hold.

Tightening the blockade had been Riyadh’s latest aggressive tack. While Saudi regime appeared to be easing its restrictio­ns on aid to Yemenis, the Trump administra­tion can do a lot more to rein in Saudi aggression. Trump’s closeness with the Saudi regime has given him a good deal of clout with Riyadh. He should use it to get the Saudis to begin working toward a day when Yemeni citizens are free from the gears of conflict. Alliances, regardless of their importance or usefulness, should never require turning a blind eye to outright cruelty.

Email letters to the editor to romenewstr­ibune@RN-T.com or submit them to the Rome News-Tribune, 305 E. Sixth Ave., Rome, GA 30162.

 ??  ?? Letters to the editor: Roman Forum, Post Office Box 1633, Rome, GA 30162-1633 or email romenewstr­ibune@RN-T.com
Letters to the editor: Roman Forum, Post Office Box 1633, Rome, GA 30162-1633 or email romenewstr­ibune@RN-T.com

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States