Almost a year and a half into Saudi Arabia’s U.S.-backed bombing campaign in Yemen, the humanitarian toll has become so extensive that the International Committee of the Red Cross has taken the unusual step of donating entire morgue units to Yemeni hospitals.
“The hospitals were not able to cope,” said Rima Kamal, a Yemen-based spokesperson for the Red Cross. “You could have more than 20 dead people brought into one hospital on one single day. The morgue capacity at a regular hospital is not equipped to handle this influx of dead bodies.”
“At times several dead bodies had to be stored on one shelf to avoid further decomposition,” Kamal continued. “The situation was not sustainable.”
Saudi Arabia began bombing Yemen in March 2015, after Houthi rebels took control of the capital and forced Yemen’s Saudi-backed leader, Abdu Rabbu Mansour Hadi, into exile. The United Nations has since attributed the majority of the war’s 6,500 deaths to the Saudi coalition, which the U.S. and U.K. have resupplied with tens of billions of dollars of weapons.
The Red Cross has donated body bags and refrigerated storage machines to three hospitals – two in the capital of Sana’a, and one in Dhamar, in southwestern Yemen. “More are in the pipeline,” said Kamal.
Aid workers also train hospital staff in the forensics of identifying bodies.
“It is not that common for the ICRC to donate morgues,” said Kamal. “The fact that we now do is telling of the size of the human tragedy in Yemen.”
Two people killed in a heavy shelling on their neighborhood are seen on stretchers at the entrance of the hospital. Their respective families still have to come in to identify them. Al-Rawdah Hospital. Taiz. Yemen.
Photo: ICRC
Shortages of electricity, fuel, and medical supplies also affect hospitals’ ability to provide care. The Red Cross has had to donate generators to help ensure medical facilities and morgue units were provided with power.
Both sides in the conflict are complicit in the hundreds of reported attacks on clinics and hospitals, which have led many to close, leaving more than 14 million Yemenis without access to healthcare.
Last week, for example, Saudi Arabia bombed an MSF-supported hospital, leading the charity to withdraw doctors from six hospitals in northern Yemen. The government-run Saudi Press Agency issued a statement expressing “deep regret” over MSF’s decision. Saudi Arabia had previously bombed MSF medical facilities and personnel three times.
In addition to a relentless bombing campaign, the Saudi-led coalition has maintained a strict naval blockade of the country, which previously imported 90 percent of its food, medicine, and fuel. As a result, the war in Yemen has spawned one of the world’s largest human-made humanitarian disasters.UNICEF reported in May that more than 21 million people – nearly 90 percent of Yemen’s population –are in need of humanitarian assistance. Fourteen million people lack sufficient food, with more than 320,000 children under 5 years old at risk of severe malnutrition.
The situation has been exacerbated by recent surge of airstrikes. In the days following the collapse of one-sided peace talks last month, the Saudi-led coalition bombed a key bridge to Sana, which Oxfam estimates carried 90 percent of World Food Program aid to the besieged city. Days later, Saudi Arabia announced the closure of the Sana airport, effectively cutting of humanitarian aid to millions of people.
As Yemen descends into chaos, the U.N. is facing a lack of resources. The current humanitarian response plan for Yemen calls for $1.8 billion, but the international community has only funded 28 percent of it. Ironically, 60 percent of the money comes from countries involved in bombing Yemen or supplying weapons to the coalition.
Under pressure from critics to end the war, Secretary of State John Kerry arrived in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, on Wednesday, to participate in talks about the situation in Yemen. Kerry’s visit comes as numerous Human Rights groups are calling for a Saudi arms embargo, and as several U.S. congressmen are trying to block arms shipments.
Top photo: A hospital operated by the the Paris-based aid agency, Doctors Without Borders (MSF), on August 16, 2016, in Yemen, a day after the hospital was hit by an air strike by the Saudi-led coalition.
Excellent reporting, thank you.
The companies that make the armaments sold to the Saudi’s are obviously unaffected by death tolls, its the business and the profits that matter. This is what we have become, we count money not bodies. We have lost all morality.
We Americans have become vampires with an insatiable thirst for war-spilled blood.
There is nothing honourable or heroic in attacking smaller, weaker countries, intentionally destroying infrastructure and shattering societies.
The atrocities committed by the Saudi coalition in Yemen is beyond belief, but the level of indifference exhibited by the “lovers of human rights” in the US media and NGOs is cynical. There is plenty of lip service, but no action.
It demonstrates once again that a large segment of NGOs are nothing but a front that jumps into action when a media propaganda storm is needed.
You can’t look into this stuff for more than 5 minutes without becoming more and more of a depressed conspiracy theorist — look at the straits. Look at Djibouti. Read about Mahmoud Harbi, killed in a mysterious plane crash in 1960. Look at al-Houthi’s biography, which seems to have involved much more protest than armed violence. It’s the first time I’ve understood that “Houthis” are not an ethnic group in Yemen — even the terminology in most reporting seems designed to suggest oh golly what are you going to do about these tribal peoples with their ancient sectarian problems.
Another coffin nail in the legacy of President Peace. Killary is eagerly waiting in the on-deck circle; bombs away!
After thousands of years of wars and other mass killings for territory and resources (now euphemistically called geopolitics), one would think that the human race would have evolved beyond this type of behavior and shed its more base materialistic desires. I don’t know if I’m too impatient or just expect too much of humans, but I’ve totally given up on our species. The best thing that humans could do by far would be to stop breeding and die out so that the rest of the Earth could live in relative peace.
Jeff, you’re right.
Whenever I get too pumped up about Global Warming and the environmental changes we’ve put into motion I often conclude, with peaceful resolve, that maybe it’s best for the world if humans vacated. We’ve perfected war, genocide, and commoditized everything from disasters to sickness. Ironic that our most lofty ideals, i.e. our religious beliefs, are almost always the justification for our best butchery.
What possible interest could the US have in the existence of Yemen. Our tax dollars are siphoned off by the Military to ensure the re-election of our mindless leaders while we create another entire generation of Terrorists who hate the US. Sadly, our Corporate Media doesn’t report anything about Yemen but decides that we need to know about the hangnail on the pinky finger of the 3rd string quarterback of some gangster NFL team.
Thank you for continuing to cover this!
As a taxpayer in the US, I can’t help but feel anger, frustration and resentment.
Many Americans do not agree with war crimes such as these, but action seems far away when this isn’t the news story going viral today…