Mass exodus: Displaced Yemenis in tents flee violence of Houthis
The violence perpetrated by the
Iranian-backed Houthi militia has caused the displacement of a large number of
families in western Yemen in light of the difficult humanitarian conditions
that the country has been experiencing since the Houthi coup.
Mass exodus
According to estimates by local
officials, the number of displaced families has reached about 1,000, while one
aid worker indicated that the number is close to 6,000 displaced families.
The Al-Wa'ra camp for the displaced
was set up as an emergency in Al-Khoukha district, an area under the control of
the internationally recognized government forces, due to the continued flow of
displaced families from the areas that were evacuated south of Hodeidah in
implementation of the Stockholm Agreement.
According to the Al-Mashhad
al-Yemeni website, one of the displaced in the new camp said that the
assistance the displaced received gave him feelings of hope for a stable life
far from the Houthi militia, which committed atrocities, including slaughter,
killing and flaying, amounting to war crimes.
New violation
The joint forces had unilaterally
evacuated their positions covered by the Stockholm Agreement, south of
Hodeidah, but the Houthi militia violated the rules of the UN agreement and
invaded those areas in the coastal governorate.
During the control of these areas,
the Houthis practiced intimidation against the population and executed and
massacred civilians suspected of collaborating with government forces, which
led to the outbreak of an unprecedented displacement crisis.
In this context, the director of the
Executive Unit for the Management of IDPs Camps in the West Coast, Hamid
al-Khazan, said in press statements that the local authorities, in cooperation
with the humanitarian cell in the joint forces, opened a camp for 300 families
(2,100 individuals) who arrived in Al-Khoukha out of about a thousand families
who had managed to escape the areas where the Houthis had entered.
“The authorities are preparing to
open another camp for 600 families (4,200 individuals) who are still without
shelter until now, after the joint forces provided the ground on which the camp
will be established,” Khazan added.
Sudden entry
According to Khazan, the families
who were housed in the first camp were provided with shelter materials and
emergency aid kits, while the confrontations in the Al-Ghuwaireq area south of
Tuhayta closed the way for civilians fleeing from the areas the Houthis
entered, especially since the militia’s entry was sudden, which made it
difficult for many families to escape.
Renewed
violence
For its part, the International
Organization for Migration (IOM) stated that after the renewed hostilities on
the western coast of Yemen, the organization’s Displacement Tracking Matrix
estimated the displacement of more than a thousand families during three days
of this month, and that the majority of internally displaced people had fled to
the city of Al-Khoukha (895 families), followed by Mocha (129 families).
The organization emphasized that the
situation remains highly volatile, with reports of continuing clashes along the
new front lines, particularly in areas west of Hais and south of Tuhayta. Many
people were forced to flee for the second or third time and are now fleeing
again to displacement sites in Tuhayta and Al-Khoukha.
It said that as of November 17, IOM
teams have registered 120 newly displaced families in IOM-supported sites in
Al-Khoukha, and there are reports of 132 newly displaced families in
IOM-supported sites in Tuhayta.
In total, an estimated 815 newly
displaced families have arrived at sites managed by IOM, local authorities and
humanitarian partners, with reports of 439 in Al-Khoukha, 260 in Mocha and 136
in Tuhayta.
IOM is particularly concerned about
the situation of more than 1,700 displaced families who remain in seven
locations near the front lines in Tuhayta, where humanitarian access has become
limited.
The organization said that its teams
in Al-Khoukha are continuing to register the displaced, and that the local
authorities are planning to establish two additional sites in Al-Khoukha and
one in Mocha to support the newly displaced, as the majority of the displaced
persons share overcrowded shelters and are in need of basic and non-food
household items, cash assistance, and greater access to water and toilets.
As winter approaches, they also need
sandbags and other materials so that their shelters can withstand the strong
monsoons.
Emergency
response
According to the statement, IOM is
working with partners to respond to the needs of those affected by providing
basic services to the newly displaced in nine sites it manages, where it has
deployed mobile medical teams to provide immediate health services to the displaced,
including health examinations and emergency medical care, as part of the
emergency and preparedness activities. It is also stocking 1,400 emergency
shelter kits and 1,900 hygiene kits and non-food items in Mocha and Aden.
The city of Hodeidah, which includes
a port that is a lifeline for millions of people, has been under the control of
the Houthis for years, but government forces were deployed around it from the
southern and part of the eastern side until they retreated tens of kilometers.