Wednesday, April 24, 2024 | Shawwal 14, 1445 H
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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Spread of combat and cholera wreaks misery in Yemen

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Shortages, unpaid wages cripple Yemeni health system; Human suffering takes back seat to geopolitical struggle -


DUBAI/CAIRO: Spilling into the hallways of crowded Yemeni hospitals, children writhe in pain from cholera. Displaced villagers roam baking hot plains and barren mountains to evade warring militias.


The escalating outbreak of disease and displacement of tens of thousands by recent fighting has inflamed one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises, pushing Yemen’s war-pummelled society ever nearer to collapse.


Cholera, a diarrhoeal disease spread by food or water tainted with human faeces, has killed 180 people in less than three weeks, according to the Geneva-based International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).


Samira Ali, a worried mother, expressed shock at the scene at Sabaeen Hospital in Sanaa, the ancient capital in the north held by the Ansar Allah since late 2015.


“My young son suddenly started suffering from severe diarrhoea. We went to the hospital and found it full, we couldn’t find a place,” said Ali, a teacher.


“Only with difficulty were the doctors able to give him the medicines which saved his life. This situation is tragic.”


The United Nations now estimates that in Yemen a child under the age of five dies every 10 minutes from preventable causes, two million people have fled fighting near their homes and only half of hospitals have staff and supplies to function normally.


A coalition intervened on Hadi’s side and has carried out thousands of air strikes targeting the Ansar Allah, though UN officials said last year these had killed more than 2,000 civilians as well.


More than ever before in the war, state institutions are losing their ability to withstand the spread of pestilence and the mounting death toll.


A battle for control of the central bank has left salaries in the lands in and around Sanaa largely unpaid for six months, ruining the lives of hospital and sanitation workers.


Pumps to sanitise the water supply sit idle for lack of fuel, while maintenance agencies tasked with chlorinating aquifers go without salaries and supplies.


Doctors treating the cholera outbreak fare little better. “The health system has been hanging by a thread,” Unicef’s spokesman in Yemen, Rajat Madhok, said.


“Wages haven’t come in, humanitarian workers and doctors are trying their best but some leave their work to seek jobs where they can get paid. Declining value of the currency hurts and all this has a cascading effect that is badly hurting the sector.”


— Reuters


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