In the rubble of Taiz, all roads to a normal life are blocked
In a conflict often called the “forgotten war”, one
Yemeni city feels most forgotten of all.
“I want the whole world to know about Taiz,”
declares Mohammed Saleh al-Qaisi. “I want them to see what Taiz was, and what’s
happening now.” We’re sitting on a step on a street buzzing with motorcycles
and the tinkle of bicycle bells. A few shops away, young men drinking hot sweet
tea cradle rifles in their laps and wave at passersby. Above them, a billboard
advertises books from Cambridge University Press and McGraw-Hill.
Yemen’s third-largest city was once known as its
capital of culture. Taizis prided themselves on producing the best-educated
people who became the best teachers, lawyers, pilots, you name it. Now it is
known as Yemen’s longest-running battlefield, the most heavily bombed by
blistering Saudi airstrikes, the deadliest governorate in Yemen’s devastating
war. The conflict, which enters its sixth year this month, pits the Houthis
aligned to Iran against Yemen’s government backed by a Saudi-led coalition
supported by western military powers.
And Taiz has had its own combustible mix of
infighting among rival groups armed by the coalition, including political
Islamists and hardline Salafists comprising gunmen accused of links to
al-Qaida.
“I know what this city was. I know what I went to
school for,” Qaisi says, his eyes watering.
Attention to Taiz’s plight has been eclipsed by
alarm over the fate of more strategic battlefields, including the contested Red
Sea port city of Hodeida. The last major effort to push Yemen away from war in
December 2018, in UN-brokered negotiations outside Stockholm, only reached an
“understanding” on the need to talk about Taiz. It didn’t go any further.
And adding Taiz to Yemen’s long shopping list has
made it even harder. “Now its fate is linked to a much bigger picture in a
three-dimensional chess game,” says Peter Salisbury of the International Crisis
Group.
In recent weeks, after one of the quietest periods
in this war, there’s been an upsurge in fighting on key frontlines across
Yemen.
Taiz is a city split in two, an ugly emblem of the
wider conflict tearing a whole country apart. From the top of Jabal Sabir, the
city’s towering mountain, inside the hollow pockmarked shell of what was once a
prized tourist resort, there’s a dazzling view. A vista that once drew visitors
now provides the best vantage point to understand Taiz’s political topography.
The frontline slashes through the city from east to
west, leaving a visible green and brown scar. Greenery has spread like tentacles
across the no man’s land. Beyond this line, about a third of Taiz is in the
hands of Houthis who control the heights overlooking the northern edge of the
city. The rest is run by the government. Close up, it’s a seam crackling with
tension.
After securing permission from the head of a
neighbourhood committee on the government side, whose members identify
themselves as the “resistance”, we descend winding steps, sheltered by dark
shadows and stone walls riddled with bullet holes, to a largely deserted lane.
“My family is hiding at home,” one of our escorts,
in a Yemeni patterned turban and traditional “futa” skirt, says as we hang back
a bit from the open street. “Whoever goes out gets shot by the Houthis.”
Families are caught in the crosshairs of both sides.
War bestowed a new title on Taiz: “city of snipers”.
From where we stand, we see how life has been pulled
from homes facing the line of fire. Building facades are like mournful faces of
black-eyed windows and gaping holes.
Another man hurries past. “There’s only one street
between my home and the Houthis,” he says, pointing the other way as he catches
his breath. “My family was so scared they left.”
Beyond this alley, daily life is a battle. All roads
in and out of Taiz, except one, are controlled by the Houthis.
“We were invited to cross to the other side for
talks but clashes broke out and both sides shot at us,” recalls Abdul Kareen
Shaiban with a grimace as he remembers a negotiating effort years ago. An MP
who chairs a roads committee, he’s talked many times over many years to both
sides.
We’re standing on what was once a bustling main road
running though Taiz, which connected it to other major cities including the
capital Sana’a in the north. A few goats pick their way down the carriageway
and a little boy furiously pedals past on his beat-up bicycle. We can see the
rusted metal barriers overgrown with shrubbery blocking the road a short
distance away. “People inside this city have nothing to do with politics or
war. They just simply want to live and they need a road,” Shaiban says.
“The siege
has made life difficult and deadly,” chimes in Dalia Nasr of another
initiative, Taizi Women for Life. She knows the danger – a sniper’s bullet
blinded her in one eye. Her aunt, two brothers and a nephew were killed during
clashes.
Nasr explains how blocking the roads splits life in
two: patients with chronic illnesses are separated from specialised hospitals;
students can’t make it to their universities; workers living on the government
side can’t reach factories mainly concentrated in the area under Houthi
control.
Getting to the other side of Taiz used to be a
five-minute drive. Now it takes more than five hours.
We take this route, which hugs mountains with
breathtaking sheer drops, bumps along a dirt track through soaring palm trees
and runs through checkpoints manned by rival groups. We weren’t given
permission by the Houthi authorities to spend time on the other side.
Everyone we meet in Taiz remembers what happened to
them as if it was yesterday. “No one pays attention to us,” says Marwan with
palpable anger. We’re standing in the rubble of his home, where 10 relatives
died as they slept in an airstrike by the Saudi-led coalition. It happened five
years ago. The house, and Marwan, are still in pieces.
“To this day we’ve received no explanation from the
local authorities or the army or the coalition,” he says. “We still don’t know
why they hit a neighbourhood full of civilians.”
Airstrikes by the coalition – often with UK- or
US-made bombs – have caused the most civilian casualties in Taiz, and other
battlefields across Yemen, according to figures compiled by the UN and other
data sources including Acled (Armed Conflict Location and Event Data project).
“The attack was so aggressive it took us six days to
find the body parts,” Marwan recalls. “We looked for them in nearby houses, on
the streets and on the roofs.” Eight of his neighbours perished in the same
attack.
We’re greeted by a gaggle of children. A little girl
in a red velvet dress, braids sticking out like a Yemeni Pippa Longstocking,
starts chattering about the attack that killed her playmate next door. The
boy’s mother, Zahra, soon arrives with graphic photographs of that fateful day.
Their home is still a mess of shattered windows and walls.
“Everyone sold Yemen for their own benefit,” Zahra
declares bitterly. “The Houthis work with Iran, half the resistance works with
Saudi Arabia, the other half with the United Arab Emirates.” It’s a lament not
just about the main warring parties, but also skirmishes between local forces
trained and armed by Arab states in the coalition. Zahra’s story is the story
of Yemen’s war. Her youngest son died in the first strike, her older son was
later shot dead, a daughter lost an eye and her husband went mad with grief.
“They see this huge crisis happening to us and no one does anything.”
When we leave, Zahra hurries after us with freshly
baked Yemeni bread – a reminder, if one was needed, that even this merciless
war can’t completely crush a kind and cultured people.