[dehai-news] AP: Tens of thousands stranded by Yemen fighting


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From: Berhane Habtemariam (Berhane.Habtemariam@gmx.de)
Date: Fri Sep 25 2009 - 18:27:37 EDT


Tens of thousands stranded by Yemen fighting

Aid groups warn of humanitarian crisis, unable to reach those fleeing
Yemen's fighting

AHMAD AL-HAJ and SARAH EL DEEB
AP News

Sep 25, 2009 13:53 EST

Tens of thousands of Yemenis displaced by warfare between the government and
Shiite rebels are stranded around the war zone with aid agencies unable to
reach them because of the intensified fighting, U.N. officials and rights
activists said.

The humanitarian crisis has been worsened by tribes in the region robbing
relief convoys as well as heavy rains that have washed away tents in some
camps, they said.

Yehia Abdel-Wahab, a 46-year old farmer, told The Associated Press on
Thursday that his family and 16 others were living in the open after fleeing
the fighting in northern Yemen.

"We are living on handouts from the locals," he said by telephone, saying
he, his mother and his three children have been living for days under a tree
in the Batna region about 60 miles (100 kilometers) north of San'a and that
no aid has reached the area.

"It is getting cold and we are missing many things," he said. "We are
suffering from neglect. We are only getting promises made of air."

Abdel-Wahab fled his home in the region of Horf Sufyan further north. He
stopped first at a makeshift camp nearby, but then fled further south
because the fighting was spreading. Two days after he left the makeshift
camp, it was hit by government warplanes in a strike that killed nearly 80
people.

Fighting has dramatically escalated since August between government forces
and the rebels, causing turmoil in a nearly 160-mile (260-kilometer),
mountainous stretch between Yemen's capital San'a and the Saudi border. Even
before the current escalation, the fighting had displaced some 150,000
people since it began in 2004.

Since August, tens of thousands more have been forced to flee their homes,
but exact numbers are unclear, a reflection of the chaos. Government
officials put the number at around 60,000, while the international aid
agency OXFAM estimates them at 100,000.

The U.N. refugee agency and International Red Cross say they have about
37,000 newly displaced people who have been registered and are receiving
assistance, many in camps around the north.

Thousands more are stranded around the area, some living along roadsides,
some trapped in Saada - the home of the rebels, which has been at the center
of fighting. Two cease-fires declared by the government in the past month
fell apart within hours.

Up to 30,000 are trapped north of Saada near the Saudi border, said Laure
Chedraoui, a spokeswoman for the U.N. refugee agency said. The UNHCR has
appealed to Saudi Arabia and Yemen to let relief supplies across its border
to reach them but has yet to get permission, she said.

Furthermore, old camps that were holding those who fled earlier fighting
have filled with a new influx and are inaccessible because of the turmoil,
she said.

Officials say they are struggling to set up new camps while dealing with
declining supplies.

Newly displaced people continue to trickle daily into the established camps
in Saada province and the neighboring province of Amran, some walking for
days before making it to refuge, Andrej Mahecic, a UNHCR spokesman said in
Geneva on Tuesday.

Tents in one camp housing 5,000 people in neighboring Hajjah province were
damaged by heavy rains, leaving hundreds of families without shelter,
Mahecic said.

Human rights activist Mahmoud Taha said the authorities and international
aid agencies failed to set up a new camp in the Amran area to absorb the
stream of fleeing civilians because a local tribe refused to give the land
for the camp without charging a fee.

Taha, an Amran resident, said some tribes are also robbing aid convoys -
taking at least seven trucks of supplies.

The rebellion started in 2004 when Shiite fighters took up arms against the
central government complaining of neglect, and widening influence of
hard-line Sunni fundamentalists, some of whom consider Shiites as heretics.

____

Sarah El Deeb reported from Cairo.

 

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