Khaleej Times

Yemen children turn to begging to survive

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sanaa — After Mustafa’s father was killed in Yemen’s conflict between the government and Houthi rebels, the 15-year-old turned to begging to survive.

He is just one of scores of Yemeni children who plead for donations at the rebel-held capital’s road junctions every day to feed themselves and their siblings.

Some have lost one or both parents in the war that escalated in 2015, while others seek to help parents whose public salaries have dried up in the conflict.

After Mustafa’s father died two years ago in the northern town of Haradh, the teenager moved to the capital with his mother and three brothers. “I tried to find a job but I couldn’t,” says Mustafa.

“We’ve been begging in the streets of Sanaa since we stopped finding anything to eat,” he says, adding he makes no more than $5 a day.

Nearby, eight-year-old Abeer runs from one car to the next asking for money, her younger brother Abdulrahma­n in tow. “We don’t have anything to eat so we came to find some money or food,” she says.

Thin and pale-faced, child beggars gather outside mosques and restaurant­s waiting for donations.

At street intersecti­ons, young boys equipped with rags and plastic bottles filled with soap water strive to make a living by wiping windshield­s.

Others sit beside their mothers selling boxes of tissues.

Yemen’s conflict has taken a heavy humanitari­an toll since it worsened in March 2015. More than 7,400 people have been killed in the war since that date, the UN says, including around 1,400 children.

In Sanaa, some Yemenis have been unpaid since President AbdRabbu Mansour Hadi decided in September to move the central bank out of the city and into his government’s temporary capital of Aden.

The move has left the rebels, who have set up their own administra­tion in Sanaa, unable to pay the salaries of public sector employees.

“The number of child beggars has surged, mainly after salaries stopped for government employees in the capital,” says Ahmed Al Qurashi, head of Seyaj, a Yemeni organisati­on for the protection of children. — AFP

 ?? AFP ?? A Yemeni child sells dried dates in Sanaa’s Suq Al Melh. —
AFP A Yemeni child sells dried dates in Sanaa’s Suq Al Melh. —

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