THE NEW YEAR seems to have brought little change for civilians living under bombs in Yemen. Early Tuesday morning, missiles reportedly fired by aircraft supporting the Saudi-led and U.S.-backed coalition damaged a center for the blind in the capital city of Sanaa, as well as the city’s chamber of commerce, a wedding hall, and at least one residential area.
Multiple outlets reported that the attacks caused no casualties, though one local report, citing an unidentified security official, claimed “at least three people” were wounded at the al Noor Center for Care and Rehabilitation of the Blind in Sanaa. Footage from the capital, published by the International Business Times, showed images of crumbled buildings, collapsed rooftops, and a young man weeping in the street. A spokesperson for UNICEF in Sanaa told Vice News that the al Noor Center offers classes for visually impaired students.
In an email to The Intercept Tuesday, Rupert Colville, spokesperson for the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, confirmed that his office had received reports of airstrikes in Yemen indeed hitting the al Noor Center, as well as the other reported sites. The Saudi Embassy in Washington, D.C. and the U.S. Central Command, which oversees operations in the region, did not respond to requests for comment.
Earlier in the day, as reports of the latest round of strikes in Yemen first began to emerge, Colville addressed reporters in Geneva on the “terrible toll” the conflict in Yemen has exacted on the nation’s civilian population, reporting that at least 81 civilians had been killed in Yemen and another 109 injured in December 2015 as result of the ongoing conflict.
These latest figures, Colville pointed out, brought the total number of civilians recorded killed over nine months of fighting to 2,795, with an additional 5,324 civilians recorded wounded, raising the total number of recorded civilian casualties in the conflict to 8,119. According to Colville, the U.N. documented “at least 11 civilians” reportedly killed by Houthi shelling in December — “a significant decrease compared to the 32 civilians who were reported killed by them in November” — while the deaths of 62 of the civilians reported killed last month were attributed to coalition airstrikes.
“This is more than twice the number of civilians reported killed in November,” Colville said. Additionally, the U.N. spokesperson added, “We have also received alarming information on the alleged use of cluster bombs by coalition forces in Hajjah Governorate.” According to Colville, the U.N. documented the presence of cluster munitions in “several” Yemeni villages and two separate incidents of unexploded ordinance injuring people.
Condemned by international groups for the risks they pose to civilians, cluster bombs are banned in a 2008 treaty signed by 117 nations around the world. Saudi Arabia and the United States, however, are not on that list. Last year, Human Rights Watch presented evidence that Saudi Arabia had used U.S.-supplied cluster bombs in its war against the Houthis. At the time, the Saudi government — which in 2015 replenished its arsenal with 22,000 bombs purchased in a $1.2 billion, U.S. State Department-approved deal — insisted that it uses cluster bombs only on legitimate targets.
Journalists and human rights groups have repeatedly exposed the tremendous humanitarian costs associated with the continued bloodshed in Yemen, particularly those associated with coalition airstrikes (see here, here and here). For the time being, however, the conflict shows no sign of letting up. Indeed, the latest rounds of strikes follow the breakdown of a tenuous ceasefire agreed upon last month.
For those on the ground, the sheer scale of violence associated with the ongoing airstrikes continues to boggle the mind. “People with disabilities are being struck in their residence,” Abdullah Ahmed Banyan, a patient at the al Noor Center, told IBT Tuesday. “What is this criminality?” asked Bayan, who described two missiles striking the “live-in quarters” of the building. “Is it the blind that are fighting the war?”
Top photo: Yemenis check the rubble of Sanaa’s chamber of commerce, which was destroyed by airstrikes on the capital, Jan. 5, 2016.
Bet they didn’t see that coming.
Saudi Arabia is a disgusting, vile regime…Their days are numbered.
So the Saudis bombed a center for the blind that is funded by the Jordanian royal family? I wonder how happy *they* will be about that…
Saudis bombing Yemen is bombing a kindergarten class! Keep up the count.
Bombing Yemen is like bombing a kindergarten class. That is what the Saudisbigguys can handle! Anyone comparing with israel casualties? The Sauds kill more muslims that the israelis do. It is safer for a muslim in israel than in arab lands! Think god is having a big laugh here! Sososososossad!
But…Israel is always wrong!
Ryan, you forgot to stoke the white guilt by reminding us that we supplied the bombs to kill the blind.
I will be subtracting one internet point from your scorecard sir.
If you are a US military person, are you willing to die for your paymaster? If you are not a military person, are you an NSA employee? If you are, are you capable of tippy-toing through the minefield of requirements and regulations and kow-tow to the paymaster for your oh so small cut of the cake? If you are not NSA, then you must surely be a Nobody From Civvie Street, so why are you willing to take an arse-fucking from your corporate-ponsored government and then come here and pretend to be a tough guy?
I know you aren’t one of the Powers That Be, as they are too busy raping you and stealing your money and rights for them to bother coming down here to comment.
Whichever way you paint it, you look like a real sorry fuck-broken arsehole from where I am standing. Enjoy your life, coz I sure as fuck couldn’t.
Good use of sarcasm. Really, the endless media attention directed toward the killing and maiming of disabled Yemenis has got to stop. It’s as if they were Kardashians or something.
Now is the right time to release the 28 paged redacted from the Senate’s report on 911. Time for the American public to learn the truth.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/01/12/the-missing-pages-of-the-9-11-report.html
Who were the mysterious Saudi family that vanished two weeks before 911 ?
http://gawker.com/5838498/the-mysterious-saudi-family-that-vanished-two-weeks-before-911
Obvious New American Proxy Warrior. Catching some flak over one’s heavy handed operations in ME, have your dirty “friend” do your dirty work.
So, there’s an entity that chops off people’s heads, flings explosives around, slaughters innocents, promotes an extreme form of Sunni Islam, oppresses Shiite and other religious minorities, subjugates women and promotes terrorism.
So, what’s the difference between ISIS and the Saudi kingdom? One is a U.S. ally, one isn’t, as far as we know; also, one has its capital in Riyadh. Other than that …
ISIS was born in a Saudi orgy; many fathers: the US, Turkey, …
Yea but the Saudis executed a bunch of Yall Queda the other day…. that means they are tough on terroristz.
Al Qaeda aren’t ISIS.
Al Qaeda fly planes into American institutions and blow up embassies; ISIS twat around expounding the same shit as Saudi Arabia and Turkey, blow up statues and kill liberal journalists and rock concert goers.
Spot the difference?
Hard for morons to spot when all and sundry are being deliberately tarred with the same brush. Maybe you’re a terrorist – do you own a gun? Do you love your country enough to die in some stupid mess for a corporation’s profit margin, or do you love it too much that you want to protect it from being raped by some corporation? There’s fine lines even in patriotism – best suck up to the Boss and get with what is Right and what is Wrong in these quick-changing times.
I LIKE YOU….!
Hey any nation that mass beheads 47 people and is backed come hell or high water by the United States of America, doesn’t give two shits about targeting or bombing civilians. Much less blind civilians, women, children, old folks, wedding parties, funerals . . . .
I’ve said it a hundred times if I’ve said it once since 9-11 . . . if America had been truly courageous, and smart, it would have bombed and invaded Saudi Arabia, captured and imprisoned its entire ruling family, taken control of its oil fields and brought in other Muslim nations’ member states to administer Mecca, Medina and the great Hajj.
Short of that, America should engage in full rapprochement with Iran and cut the Saudi despots loose. Then again I believe the same basic thing regarding Israel except they have nukes and would likely employ the Samson option.
Between Mecca, Medina and Jerusalem you have three of the most important venerated religious sites on the planet of fundamental importance to nearly half the world’s population. They should be world heritage sites of some kind and belong to no family or self-interested governing elite of any kind. The nominal states they presently exist in should be converted to international protectorates with limited self-rule but be fully disarmed forever. At least that’s how I see it in my ideal world.
I like your “IDEAL WORLD”.
I agree, if America had been courageous. Just one point, the President kissing the Saudi king told me where this was going.
I like your woulda, shoulda.
The Saudis, in the last few months, have demonstrated that they have cut the umbilical cord with America and have matured into a strong nation and do not need to be a subjugated subject any more.
What is the point of posting fantasies beyond sounding like Trump?
We are never going to bomb/invade SA.
We are never going to drop SA / Israel and climb into bed with Iran.
Medina / Mecca / Jerusalem will never beheritage sites.
@ charliethreeee
And at one time nobody thought the Apartheid regime of South Africa would fall, or the Berlin Wall, or the USSR would collapse, or that India would liberate itself from Britain’s colonial rule, or Algeria from French colonial rule . . . .
Nothing happens until enough people can imagine it happening in the first instance.
Yup.
There is no power on earth that can take away the two holy cities (Mecca and Medina) from the Saudi’s. If anyone try’s to do that will be sorry.
@ LoveWahab
Sure there is such a power. The power of nuclear weapons. I’m not advocating that, but that power exists in the world.