Last stand in Yemen as battle for oil-rich province rages

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MARIB, Yemen, Sept 25, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Hadi Ahmed wearily sets up a tent
in Yemen’s Marib province, after fleeing fighting yet again in the
government’s last northern stronghold which is under intense pressure from
Huthi rebels.

The Iran-backed fighters have long held the capital Sanaa which lies just
120 kilometres (75 miles) away and are mounting a fierce campaign to take the
oil-rich province.

If they are successful, it would spell disaster for the government and also
for the hundreds of thousands of displaced people sheltering in desolate
camps who would have to run for their lives once again.

Battles between the two sides have intensified in recent weeks and now
threaten the camps, including Suweida north of Marib city where Hadi, his
wife and their seven children arrived in August.

They share a plot of land just one square kilometre with 700 other
families, and have tried to make their metal-framed tent a home as best they
can, setting up a fridge that they hope to connect to a generator.

“Until this moment, we have fled five times,” the 46-year-old told AFP as
his children sat close to their meagre belongings while he fixed up their
latest dwelling.

“We arrived at this camp where there are no basic necessities for
survival.”

Hadi said they were forced to flee their home in Nihm, north of Sanaa, as
the conflict approached.

“Every time we fled… I tried to reassure them that we’re going to settle
down,” he said. “We leave a lot behind every time because we are unable to
carry our things.”

– Once a sanctuary –

Until early 2020, Marib city was spared the worst of the conflict, due to
its strategic importance with its rich oil and gas reserves, and also because
of its location near the border of regional power Saudi Arabia.

It became a sanctuary for many in the early years of the five-year war,
taking in those hoping for a new start, but that relative stability is gone
and residents are in the line of fire as the two sides battle for control.

Among those who fled to the city were doctors and wealthy businessmen, and
soon after their arrival prices of real estate jumped.

Business began to flourish as restaurants and other projects opened, until
the fighting that erupted this year threatened all that had been established
and put it at risk of falling into Huthi hands.

Government military sources say the Huthis are inching closer to the city
and tightening the noose from three sides as well as sending hundreds of
fighters into battle.

Maged Al-Madhaji, of the Sanaa Centre for Strategic Studies, said the
conflict “constitutes the highest rate of fighting in Yemen in terms of
number of battles”.

What is happening now is a “war of attrition”, he said.

As in other parts of the war-torn country, where tens of thousands of
people have been killed and some 3.3 million people displaced, it is the
civilians paying the highest price.

If Marib falls, it would come at a time when the UN has been forced to
slash its programmes in Yemen due to a funding drought as the coronavirus
slowdown hits donor nations.

“If the worst happens and they are forced to flee, we would do everything
possible to help them but it would be a struggle,” said Lise Grande, the UN’s
humanitarian coordinator for Yemen.

“We don’t have enough capacity on the ground and we don’t have enough
funding.”

– ‘Tired of life’ –

The number of internally displaced people in Marib is not clear. It is
difficult to count people staying with host communities and relatives, and
some people have fled to desert areas out of reach of humanitarian agencies.

With 140 camps currently operating, some sources put the number of
displaced at one million, and before the latest troubles the United Nations
estimated there were some 750,000.

“Nearly 80 percent of new arrivals over the past month have nowhere to go
and have had to settle in already extremely crowded displacement camps,”
International Organization for Migration spokeswoman Olivia Headon told AFP.

“This is a major concern as hygiene and physical distancing are key to
combatting Covid-19.”

Hadi’s son has married and soon the newlyweds will share their tent with
the child they are expecting.

“I take the situation in stride because of my faith in God, but the morale
of my wife and children are low. They are tired of life,” he said.

“In case we flee again, it will truly be a disaster. Where will we go?”