Berliner Boersenzeitung - Yemen's war-weary Taez choked by siege despite truce

EUR -
AED 3.769696
AFN 71.3314
ALL 97.423975
AMD 406.99721
ANG 1.849834
AOA 935.998693
ARS 1058.863803
AUD 1.655159
AWG 1.849932
AZN 1.742651
BAM 1.942879
BBD 2.072437
BDT 124.711813
BGN 1.957741
BHD 0.386898
BIF 2979.390832
BMD 1.026314
BND 1.401109
BOB 7.092897
BRL 6.332564
BSD 1.026384
BTN 88.048147
BWP 14.275339
BYN 3.359026
BYR 20115.763107
BZD 2.061709
CAD 1.478216
CDF 2943.988816
CHF 0.936411
CLF 0.03735
CLP 1030.594623
CNY 7.491478
CNH 7.537418
COP 4503.00594
CRC 523.225362
CUC 1.026314
CUP 27.197333
CVE 110.687962
CZK 25.149223
DJF 182.396896
DKK 7.459002
DOP 62.693664
DZD 139.899243
EGP 52.120455
ERN 15.394717
ETB 130.967272
FJD 2.390748
FKP 0.812823
GBP 0.829568
GEL 2.883746
GGP 0.812823
GHS 15.082838
GIP 0.812823
GMD 73.894291
GNF 8873.075621
GTQ 7.918492
GYD 214.743927
HKD 7.981729
HNL 26.078816
HRK 7.361657
HTG 134.069669
HUF 413.762261
IDR 16673.504461
ILS 3.754362
IMP 0.812823
INR 88.075638
IQD 1344.583979
IRR 43195.006116
ISK 143.694133
JEP 0.812823
JMD 159.717789
JOD 0.728066
JPY 161.78204
KES 132.661187
KGS 89.289543
KHR 4140.543793
KMF 478.390857
KPW 923.682426
KRW 1513.110793
KWD 0.316616
KYD 0.855328
KZT 538.697861
LAK 22394.283891
LBP 91918.586441
LKR 300.941506
LRD 189.372414
LSL 19.212315
LTL 3.030439
LVL 0.620807
LYD 5.044452
MAD 10.385234
MDL 18.927491
MGA 4860.720892
MKD 61.534667
MMK 3333.429281
MNT 3487.416348
MOP 8.222397
MRU 40.933171
MUR 48.185319
MVR 15.807987
MWK 1779.78082
MXN 21.173975
MYR 4.596346
MZN 65.58532
NAD 19.212501
NGN 1586.763922
NIO 37.769548
NOK 11.682575
NPR 140.876837
NZD 1.834523
OMR 0.395128
PAB 1.026384
PEN 3.855434
PGK 4.171299
PHP 59.540092
PKR 286.008771
PLN 4.272086
PYG 8006.828202
QAR 3.742348
RON 4.97403
RSD 116.996764
RUB 113.909806
RWF 1414.222203
SAR 3.854468
SBD 8.604164
SCR 15.353522
SDG 617.326055
SEK 11.446777
SGD 1.40621
SHP 0.812823
SLE 23.392887
SLL 21521.303846
SOS 586.610151
SRD 36.002999
STD 21242.636875
SVC 8.981357
SYP 2578.64608
SZL 19.208626
THB 35.330929
TJS 11.187903
TMT 3.602364
TND 3.294355
TOP 2.403732
TRY 36.268126
TTD 6.975676
TWD 33.791201
TZS 2499.07569
UAH 43.228428
UGX 3774.93141
USD 1.026314
UYU 45.249507
UZS 13246.035639
VES 53.329113
VND 26127.399964
VUV 121.846106
WST 2.835489
XAF 651.635961
XAG 0.034719
XAU 0.000386
XCD 2.773666
XDR 0.787081
XOF 651.629653
XPF 119.331742
YER 256.963449
ZAR 19.222685
ZMK 9238.070371
ZMW 28.559343
ZWL 330.472832
  • CMSC

    0.3200

    23.25

    +1.38%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    33.95

    +0.38%

  • AZN

    0.3600

    65.88

    +0.55%

  • RIO

    -0.0400

    58.77

    -0.07%

  • SCS

    -0.1600

    11.66

    -1.37%

  • BTI

    0.2200

    36.54

    +0.6%

  • NGG

    0.1200

    59.54

    +0.2%

  • BCC

    -1.6300

    117.23

    -1.39%

  • CMSD

    0.3300

    23.46

    +1.41%

  • RBGPF

    -2.9800

    59.02

    -5.05%

  • BP

    0.3700

    29.93

    +1.24%

  • RYCEF

    0.1700

    7.25

    +2.34%

  • RELX

    -0.0800

    45.34

    -0.18%

  • BCE

    0.0800

    23.26

    +0.34%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    12.14

    +0.08%

  • VOD

    0.0200

    8.51

    +0.24%

Yemen's war-weary Taez choked by siege despite truce
Yemen's war-weary Taez choked by siege despite truce / Photo: AHMAD AL-BASHA - AFP/File

Yemen's war-weary Taez choked by siege despite truce

Overloaded trucks and cars packed with families ply narrow, bumpy mountain roads surrounding this Yemeni city long-besieged by Huthi rebels -- evidence that the terms of a truce have yet to be met.

Text size:

Announced just over a month ago, the truce called for warring parties to reopen the main roads into Taez, a city of roughly 600,000 people in Yemen's southwest that has been largely cut off from the world since 2015.

So far, however, those roads remain closed, meaning truck drivers and ordinary civilians have no choice but to seek out dangerous alternative routes prone to accidents and seemingly endless traffic jams.

In normal times, one such road, known as "Al-Aqroudh", should allow drivers to reach the village of Al-Hawban east of Taez in just 15 minutes.

But now the trip can take up to eight hours.

"People are tired, especially children and women. We wait in traffic jams for three or four hours because of the narrowness of the road," truck driver Abdo al-Jaachani told AFP.

These days he only uses the road once or twice a week to avoid a rough journey that is compounded by the wear-and-tear on vehicles as well as the rising price of fuel.

Yemen's war pits the Iran-aligned Huthis against the Saudi-led military coalition backing the country's internationally recognised government.

The Huthis took control of the capital Sanaa in 2014, prompting the coalition to intervene the following year and giving rise to what the United Nations has termed the world's worst humanitarian crisis.

Hundreds of thousands of people have been killed and the country has been pushed to the brink of famine.

Despite the coalition's backing, forces loyal to the government have failed to prevent the Huthis from seizing control of most of northern Yemen and eyeing other strategic areas.

- 'Unspeakable' situation -

The two-month renewable truce began in early April, coinciding with the start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

It has provided much of the Arab world's poorest country with a rare respite from violence.

Less than a week after it took effect, Yemen's then president Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi announced he was handing over power to a new eight-man leadership council, fuelling cautious optimism over a long-term ceasefire.

The truce has also seen oil tankers arriving at the port of Hodeida, potentially easing fuel shortages in Sanaa and elsewhere.

But a deal to resume commercial flights out of Sanaa's airport for the first time in six years has yet to materialise, with a planned inaugural flight in late April postponed indefinitely. Each side blames the other for the holdup.

And Taez remains under siege, to the dismay of civil society organisations.

Each day "civilian victims fall on rugged mountain roads", more than a dozen groups said in a joint statement in April.

"The horrifying scenes of vehicles and trucks falling apart with people and goods... are unspeakable."

In a Twitter post Wednesday, the French embassy in Yemen expressed "deep concern over the siege of Taez which has lasted for several years and which places its many inhabitants in humanitarian distress".

Residents like Abdallah Rajeh find themselves unwilling to venture out to see relatives as such trips are "very painful because of the bumpy road and the traffic jams".

Like many of his neighbours, he holds out hope that the truce will eventually unblock the main roads in and out of Taez.

"If the crossings are not reopened, people will pay the price," he told AFP.

"All these problems and difficulties only affect ordinary people."

(P.Werner--BBZ)