The Independent

Four civilians are killed or wounded daily in Yemen... this is the price of ‘peace’

- BEL TREW MIDDLE EAST CORRESPOND­ENT

Four civilians have been killed or injured every day in two of Yemen’s worst-hit areas since a peace deal was agreed two years ago, Oxfam has said, warning that violence is growing across the country. Yemen’s internatio­nally recognised government and the Iran-backed Houthi rebel group signed the Stockholm Agreement on 13 December 2018 to halt hostilitie­s around the Red Sea port city of Hodeidah and to address the mounting humanitari­an crisis in the central province of Taiz.

It marked the first time in years that the warring sides had met and was supposed to lay the groundwork for a comprehens­ive long-term peace deal to end the devastatin­g conflict, now in its fifth year. Since then,

however, 592 civilians have been killed and 2,136 wounded in the two areas, according to data compiled by the Civilian Impact Monitoring Project and analysed by Oxfam, meaning that, on average, approximat­ely four civilians a day have been killed or injured.

Hannah Cooper, Oxfam’s Humanitari­an Policy and Advocacy Adviser in Yemen said: “Every day, civilians are dying or being injured in this senseless conflict, while also facing hunger and disease in what is the world’s biggest humanitari­an crisis.

“Members of the internatio­nal community, including the UK, need to stop fuelling the conflict by selling weapons for use in the war. Instead they should do all they can to get the warring parties to agree to a nationwide ceasefire that would build confidence and see all parties return to negotiatio­ns committed to achieving a lasting peace.”

Yemen has been ripped apart by a devastatin­g civil war since the Iran-backed Houthi rebels seized control of the country in late 2014, ousting the recognised president. Saudi Arabia and its gulf allies launched a bombing campaign in March 2015 to reinstate the government, hoping for a speedy resolution to the crisis.

Five years on, the conflict still rages and more recently has sparked a war within a war as southern separatist­s, nominally allied to the government, turned on their former allies to fight for an independen­t south. Over the last few months, fighting has escalated in Hodeidah and Taiz, with civilians saying they have been forced to flee to squalid displaceme­nt camps despite the winter conditions and the pandemic.

Jamila, 50, left Taiz City in search of safety and, like Mohamed, is also currently living in a classroom. She is struggling with breast cancer but has no access to healthcare.

“The local community wants us to leave – they want their school back. We can understand that, but we have no other place to go,” she said. “My husband and I have to beg for help. We’re already having trouble affording the medicine that I need. I’ve sold my jewellery to buy that. We often go for days eating only bread and water so that we can afford our medicines.”

 ?? (EPA) ?? A victim of the conflict tries to stand up at a rehabilita­tion centre in Sana’a
(EPA) A victim of the conflict tries to stand up at a rehabilita­tion centre in Sana’a

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