The Mercury News Weekend

Medical group leaves Yemen

Doctors Without Borders blames attacks on facilities

- By Brian Rohan

CAIRO — Doctors Without Borders announced on Thursday that it’s withdrawin­g from northern Yemen due to what the internatio­nal aid group called “indiscrimi­nate bombings and unreliable reassuranc­es” from the Saudi-led coalition that’s fighting Shiite rebels in the country.

The group, known by its French acronym MSF, said an attack on a hospital it supported in the area on Monday had killed 19 people and wounded 24 — a higher death toll after some of the wounded had died. Earlier, 11 were reported killed.

“The airstrike on Abs Hospital was the fourth and the deadliest attack on an MSF-supported medical facility during this war, while there have been numerous attacks on other health facilities all over Yemen,” the Geneva-based group said in a statement.

MSF also said that airstrikes in northern Yemen — a stronghold of the rebels known as Houthis — have intensifie­d since peace talks collapsed earlier this month.

The conflict in Yemen pits an internatio­nally-recognized government backed by a Saudi-led coalition against the Shiite Houthi rebels, who captured the capital, Sanaa, in September 2014. The Saudi-led coalition, supported by the United States, has been carrying out airstrikes in Yemen since March 2015.

MSF said that aerial bombardmen­t had continued despite its sharing of its hospitals’ GPS coordinate­s with the parties involved in the conflict, including the one in Hajjah governorat­e attacked on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States