This is a really awful war caused primarily by Iran arming the Houthis. So, it has put Saudi Arabia in a really terrible position. Because they cannot survive as a nation if Yemen is Shiite ruled for a variety of reasons. So, aiding the Houthis is Iran's direct war against the government of Saudi Arabia.
So, the only way to end this war or the starvation would be for Iran to stop aiding the Houthi Shiites in Yemen. Otherwise this is just going to go on and on sort of like another nightmare like Syria and Northern Iraq. So, if Iran continues to aid the Houthis this could be going on 10 or 20 years from now in the same way that the war in Syria could also be going on that long too. Only in Syria both Saudi Arabia and Iran financially aid and arm two different sides (but then again there might be 12 or 20 or more different sides to what is happening in Syria too.
So, in this sense both Yemen and Syria and Northern Iraq are proxy wars where Shiites fight Sunnis to the death of both sides.
And this likely will still be going on 20 years from now in all three countries the way this looks now.
Saudi War on Yemen: Nearly 10000 People Killed, Over 320000 Children Starving
Mintpress News (blog) | - |
According to a report from UNICEF, the bombing campaign has taken an extraordinary toll on the civilian population in Yemen:
“Attacks on schools and hospitals and the denial of humanitarian
assistance to children continue to occur. The UN verified 51 ...
Saudi War on Yemen: Nearly 10,000 People Killed, Over 320,000 Children Starving
According to a report from UNICEF, the bombing campaign has taken
an extraordinary toll on the civilian population in Yemen:
“Attacks on schools and hospitals and the denial of humanitarian
assistance to children continue to occur. The UN verified 51 attacks on
education facilities, including schools and personnel.”
ANTIMEDIA) Yemen —
A child has been killed or maimed every four hours in the year since
Saudi-led airstrikes began in Yemen — a seven fold increase over the
previous year. Though this is likely a tragic underestimation of the
true number, nearly one-third of all civilian casualties are children.
According to a report from UNICEF, the bombing campaign has taken an extraordinary toll on the civilian population in Yemen:
“Attacks on schools and hospitals and the denial of humanitarian assistance to children continue to occur. The UN verified 51 attacks on education facilities, including schools and personnel.”
Sixty-three health facilities were attacked, the U.N. verified, and basic“services and infrastructure in Yemen are on the verge of total collapse.”
“Children are not safe anywhere in Yemen. Even playing or sleeping has become dangerous,” Julien Harneis, UNICEF representative in Yemen, told AFP in an email.
“The scale of suffering in the country is staggering,” UNICEF’s report continues. “The violence has forced the majority of Yemenis into destitution. An estimated 21.2 million people — 82 per cent of the total population — need urgent humanitarian assistance. Almost half of those in need are children.”
That need has never been greater. As explained in the report, relentless airstrikes have exponentially magnified humanitarian issues that existed before U.S. bombs began dropping from Saudi coalition aircraft anddrones.
“Before March 2015, almost half of all children under the age of five were chronically malnourished. Today, UNICEF estimates that 320,000 children face severe malnutrition, while 2.2 million children need urgent humanitarian assistance to prevent further deterioration in their nutritional status.”
Along with malnutrition, a number of other health issues and fatalities, particularly among children, can be traced to ancillary impacts of war.
“UNICEF estimates that nearly 10,000 children under the age of five may have died in the past year from preventable diseases as a result of the decline in key health services … This is in addition to nearly 40,000 children who die every year in Yemen before their fifth birthday … Studies have shown that between 3 to 15 times as many people die from indirect causes of armed conflict.”
Civilian non-combatants experience the most devastating consequences from the bombing campaign, evidenced in part by disturbing reports of hospitals, an ambulance, a popular market — and even a wedding — destroyed by airstrikes. After a bomb on March 15 killed at least 120 people shopping at a bustling marketplace in Mastaba — the lone market in its entire district — questions began circulating about the possibility these airstrikes constitute war crimes.
“Looking at the figures,” Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, said at the time, “it would seem the coalition is responsible for twice as many civilian casualties as all other forces put together, and people are struggling desperately to survive.”
UNICEF echoes Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) in beseeching “all parties to the conflict [to] abide by the laws of war, and immediately stop attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure, including schools, health and water facilities.”
As Water, Sanitation and Hygiene specialist for UNICEF, Marije Broekhuigsen, warned in the report, “Yemen is on the brink of a humanitarian catastrophe.”
(According to a report from UNICEF, the bombing campaign has taken an extraordinary toll on the civilian population in Yemen:
“Attacks on schools and hospitals and the denial of humanitarian assistance to children continue to occur. The UN verified 51 attacks on education facilities, including schools and personnel.”
Sixty-three health facilities were attacked, the U.N. verified, and basic“services and infrastructure in Yemen are on the verge of total collapse.”
official MintPress sponsor
Even before the Saudi-led, U.S.-backed coalition began the now
year-long offensive, Yemen had been one of the most impoverished
countries in the world. But the intense fighting by all parties to the
conflict has created a humanitarian crisis of alarming proportions — and
children tend to be most affected.“Children are not safe anywhere in Yemen. Even playing or sleeping has become dangerous,” Julien Harneis, UNICEF representative in Yemen, told AFP in an email.
“The scale of suffering in the country is staggering,” UNICEF’s report continues. “The violence has forced the majority of Yemenis into destitution. An estimated 21.2 million people — 82 per cent of the total population — need urgent humanitarian assistance. Almost half of those in need are children.”
That need has never been greater. As explained in the report, relentless airstrikes have exponentially magnified humanitarian issues that existed before U.S. bombs began dropping from Saudi coalition aircraft anddrones.
“Before March 2015, almost half of all children under the age of five were chronically malnourished. Today, UNICEF estimates that 320,000 children face severe malnutrition, while 2.2 million children need urgent humanitarian assistance to prevent further deterioration in their nutritional status.”
Along with malnutrition, a number of other health issues and fatalities, particularly among children, can be traced to ancillary impacts of war.
“UNICEF estimates that nearly 10,000 children under the age of five may have died in the past year from preventable diseases as a result of the decline in key health services … This is in addition to nearly 40,000 children who die every year in Yemen before their fifth birthday … Studies have shown that between 3 to 15 times as many people die from indirect causes of armed conflict.”
Civilian non-combatants experience the most devastating consequences from the bombing campaign, evidenced in part by disturbing reports of hospitals, an ambulance, a popular market — and even a wedding — destroyed by airstrikes. After a bomb on March 15 killed at least 120 people shopping at a bustling marketplace in Mastaba — the lone market in its entire district — questions began circulating about the possibility these airstrikes constitute war crimes.
“Looking at the figures,” Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, said at the time, “it would seem the coalition is responsible for twice as many civilian casualties as all other forces put together, and people are struggling desperately to survive.”
UNICEF echoes Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) in beseeching “all parties to the conflict [to] abide by the laws of war, and immediately stop attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure, including schools, health and water facilities.”
As Water, Sanitation and Hygiene specialist for UNICEF, Marije Broekhuigsen, warned in the report, “Yemen is on the brink of a humanitarian catastrophe.”
No comments:
Post a Comment