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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

After fleeing fighting in Marib, displaced Yemenis await help

Children are pictured at a camp for internally displaced people (IDPs) on the outskirts of Marib city, on October 16. - Reuters
Children are pictured at a camp for internally displaced people (IDPs) on the outskirts of Marib city, on October 16. - Reuters
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MARIB, Yemen: Iman Saleh Ali and her family left Al Jubah in the dead of night with only the clothes on their back to escape fighting between government forces and their Ansar Allah foes, the second time they have been forced to do so in the battle for Yemen's Marib.


With no means to afford accommodation, they now wait for assistance, huddled with 25 other families in a make-shift camp in Wadi Abida, east of Marib City, which is already home to hundreds of thousands of displaced Yemenis.


"We took nothing with us, not even a blanket. Just people escaping," said the woman in her 50s. "We need beds, warm tents ... until God answers our prayers and we can settle down."


In the camp they have erected around the homes of relatives, young boys and girls help tighten the ropes of a tent as women collect twigs to cook meals. Children drink water from a shared metal bowl as flies swarm.


The United Nations says some 10,000 people were displaced last month alone by the fighting in Marib governorate, the internationally recognised government's last northern stronghold. It is calling for a humanitarian corridor for aid.


Security has been heightened in Marib City, one of the governorate's districts, with checkpoints and patrols, as the Ansar Allah fighters move to encircle it.


Last week they seized Al Abdiyah and Harib districts while fighting continues in Al Jubah and Jabal Murad, where Ali once lived but also had to leave two months ago due to battles.


"We had hoped to live in Al Jubah but the war followed us," she said. "None of us work and we have no income to pay for rent, we have nothing."


AID FLOWS


UN humanitarian coordinator in Yemen David Gressly told Reuters that access has been most restricted to Al Abdiyah which houses some 35,000 people, but that they have now been given authorisation though security concerns remain.


Luckily, he said, food was distributed in coordination with the World Food Programme just before the fighting, which is exacerbating a humanitarian crisis in Yemen that has left millions on the verge of famine and 20 million needing help.


"We believe now the situation is more quiet and we should see greater access in the days to come," Greesly said, but nonetheless calling for the humanitarian corridor to be agreed by the warring sides.


"We are forward-deploying into the area a lot of supplies, food, medicine but also rapid response kits that provide basic necessities for those who are displaced."


Tens of thousands of Yemenis have been killed since a coalition led by Saudi Arabia intervened against the Ansar Allah months after the group ousted the government from power in the capital, Sanaa, in late 2014.


Greesly, speaking in Sanaa, said that across Yemen this year between 200-250 civilians have been killed each month, including by landmines, active fighting, shelling and air strikes.


"To lose that many lives every month is unacceptable," he said. - Reuters


INSET


Over 90 fighters killed


RIYADH: The Saudi-led coalition fighting in Yemen said on Friday it had killed at least 92 Ansar Allah fighters in air strikes on two districts near the strategic city of Marib.


The deaths are the latest among hundreds that the coalition says have been killed in recent fighting around Marib, and come during a second week of reported intense bombing.


"Operations targeted 16 military vehicles and killed more than 92 terrorist elements" in the past 24 hours, the coalition said in a statement, carried by the official Saudi Press Agency.


The Ansar Allah rarely comments on losses, and the numbers could not be independently verified by AFP.


The coalition has for the past two weeks reported almost daily strikes around Marib.


Most of the previously announced strikes were in Abdiya, about 100 kilometres from Marib -- the internationally recognised government's last bastion in oil-rich northern Yemen.


The latest air strikes reported were in the districts of Al Jawba, some 50 kilometres south of Marib, and Al Kassara, 30 kilometres northwest.


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