Connect with us

Published

on

The grinding misery in Yemen just got worse. Yet while their own suffering goes on in virtual silence, they still protest in towns across Yemen in their hundreds of thousands about the Israeli bombing in Gaza.

Yemen, one of the poorest countries in the world, has found itself thrust into the centre of the war on Gaza. As if that wasn’t unlikely enough, the Houthi militants who control the bulk of the Yemeni population through a combination of force, fear and extensive outside help from Iran, are now being viewed by many as heroes.

The Houthi actions in wreaking havoc on global shipping routes in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, has seen them surge in popularity at home and gain unexpected influence and cachet abroad.

So, when I interviewed one of the group’s inner circle, the cousin of the Houthi leader, Mohammed al-Houthi, in Yemen this week, he was all smiles.

“The whole world is with the Houthis,” he told me from his base in the capital, Sanaa. “They see we are the only ones taking on Israel and defending our brothers and sisters in Palestine.”

Certainly, the Houthi attacks on shipping routes off the coast of Yemen have massively refocussed a lot of the political and worldwide business attention – and right now, it is the heavily-armed, Iranian-backed militants who appear to have the upper-hand.

New Houthi recruits parade to show support to Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, in Sanaa, Yemen.
Pic: Reuters
Image:
New Houthi recruits parade to show support to Palestinians, in Sanaa, Yemen Pic: Reuters

The UN envoy for Yemen, Hans Grundberg has already warned the situation could propel Yemen back into a fresh cycle of war.

He told the UN Security Council last month (15 March): “What happens regionally impacts Yemen and what happens in Yemen can impact the region.”

And the global attention the Houthis attacks have garnered appears to have galvanised the militants even more – whilst the international community seems powerless to halt them.

American and British military attacks on Houthi bases in the north have failed to stop the militants’ assault on shipping. The longer this continues, the more challenging the talks on a lasting peace in the country become, with Mr Grundberg pointing out to the UN: “With more interests at play, the parties to the conflict in Yemen are more likely to shift calculations and alter their negotiation agendas.”

Follow Sky News on WhatsApp
Follow Sky News on WhatsApp

Keep up with all the latest news from the UK and around the world by following Sky News

Tap here

And the Houthi leaders appear all too aware of this with Mohammed al-Houthi telling Sky News: “It’s not the same Yemen as in 2015. We have the weapons and the capability and we have the targets and we have the capacity,” he said in reference apparently to the funds and ammunition they have built up with Iranian help.

He went onto vow to continue the assaults on shipping: “We also have our own surprises if they don’t stop the blockage against Gaza and also the genocide against Gaza.”

The strategically important Yemen has been split by a civil war which began nearly 10 years ago. Houthi militants backed by Iran, seized control of the north of the country as well as the capital in 2015. But the south and Aden are run by an internationally recognised authority which has the support of a Saudi-led coalition which includes America, Britain and the UAE.

The country is a patchwork of armed checkpoints run by the opposing factions as well as other competing fighting groups – all making travel and trade, dangerous and highly challenging. The country and its citizens have suffered massively from this protracted war with both sides accused of extensive human rights abuses and war crimes.

But a year ago, there appeared to be a breakthrough with Iran and Saudi Arabia, the two rival regional powers, agreeing to work towards a lasting peace deal. That was until 7 October – the Hamas attack inside Israel and the Israeli bombardment of Gaza ever since.

Most Yemenis are already predisposed to supporting the rights of the Palestinians but this has reached new levels in the face of the Israeli military operation inside Gaza, now in its sixth month.

The repeated missile and drone attacks by the Houthis militants since November have forced international cargo ships to be re-routed. The longer, more costly journey avoiding the Red Sea and going around the Cape of Good Hope has sent the price of goods up everywhere. The outcome is the poorest countries with the poorest populations have been most severely impacted. And that includes Yemen.

We were at a bread distribution site in Aden, set up by the British charity, Action for Humanity, and saw the lines of hungry children and families queuing up for the free food.

For many, an already challenging situation has just got more so, according to the charity’s Dr Shameela Islam-Zulfiqar.

“Even more people are food insecure, even more are water insecure,” she told us. “And it’s going to take more than INGOs (charities) to plug the gaps of what’s happening here.”

A ramshackle shanty town has grown up over the past few years next door to the distribution point. It’s a hotchpotch of timber, corrugated sheets, discarded fabric and torn tents hammered together to make shelters for hundreds of people displaced by old and new instability.

One of the inhabitants tells us: “The people are all suffering. They live from day to day…some begging, selling scrap or borrowing money…but it’s very difficult.”

At the Al-Sadaqah hospital in Aden, the doctors despair over the mounting numbers of starving children being brought in. Dr Mohammed Rajeh shows us into the malnutrition ward where he says he’s just admitted three more babies overnight. “We are seeing a rise in the number of those babies needing help,” he says. The problem of hunger seems to be getting worse.

Several wards we go into have sick and malnourished young ones. But one ward stands out to us. Side by side in adjacent hospital beds, there are two tiny babies, struggling to stay in this world and tended to by nursing staff who’re not at all confident they will succeed.

The babies are both painfully thin with ribs protruding; extended, bloated stomachs and crinkled extra folds of skin hanging off tiny, stick-like limbs. Both are wasting away from lack of food. Their mothers cant feed them themselves because they are hungry and malnourished themselves.

Their fathers can’t earn enough to feed the families’ adults nor the families’ children. The fight to save the babies is the toughest job Dr Rajeh has right now. “Day to day, we are seeing an increase in patients with diarrhoea and malnutrition,” he says. “And with infections and diarrhoea, we fear for them. We could lose them at any moment.”

Yemen is enduring a near economic collapse. The teetering health system is under enormous strain with more than half the country without access to clean water and now facing a fresh outbreak of cholera.

Emergency isolation tents have been set up in the grounds of Al-Sadaqah hospital to cope with the influx of cholera patients and the extra numbers expected.

“We’re seeing sick people coming from all over Yemen,” Dr Saleh Dobahi told us. He’s especially worried because that suggests to him that there are several sources of the disease around the country. “It’s caused by poor water, poverty, sewage affecting food. People are poor in Yemen,” he added. “And this cholera seems to be a stronger, different strain too. It is very worrying.”

Image:
Dr Saleh Dobahi

The civil war has taken a terrible toll on Yemen, turning the country into one of the world’s worst humanitarian disasters. But the additional strain caused by the regional impact of the Gaza war could be devastating.

“We have a divided country first, and we have all these problems, like inflation,” Dr Dobahi says. “We have war… and now we have another external war…so war not just in Yemen only but outside Yemen too.

“All this has an effect on our lives and at the same time, our health…the health of the population.”

Alex Crawford reports from Yemen with cameraman Jake Britton, specialist producer Chris Cunningham, and Yemen producer Ahmed Baider

Continue Reading

World

Update given on health condition of Slovakia’s PM – as suspect in court over attempted assassination

Published

on

By

Update given on health condition of Slovakia's PM - as suspect in court over attempted assassination

Slovakia’s Prime Minister Robert Fico remains in a stable but serious condition as the man accused of attempting to assassinate him appeared in court for the first time.

Health minister Zuzana Dolinkova said further two-hour surgery on Friday “contributed to a positive prognosis” for the 59-year-old, who was shot five times at point blank range while greeting supporters in the former mining town of Handlova on Wednesday.

Policemen guard the area as convoy brings the suspect, in shooting of Slovakia's Prime Minister Robert Fico, to court in Pezinok, Slovakia, Saturday, May 18, 2024. Officials in Slovakia say Prime Minister Robert Fico has undergone another operation two days after his assassination attempt and remains in serious condition. (AP Photo/Tomas Benedikovic)
Image:
Pic: AP

However, although awake at the hospital in Banska Bystrica, where Mr Fico was taken by helicopter after being shot, his condition still made it impossible to transport him to the capital, Bratislava.

Read more:
Who is Slovakia’s Prime Minister Robert Fico?

Deputy prime minister Robert Kalinak has said there was no need to formally take over Mr Fico’s official duties.

The suspected gunman was tackled to the ground and arrested at the scene of the attack and the first assassination attempt of a European political leader for more than 20 years.

He has previously been named as 71-year-old Juraj Cintula, a former shopping centre security guard who also writes poetry.

More on Robert Fico

The special criminal court in Pezinok, a small town outside the capital, Bratislava, was guarded by officers wearing balaclavas and carrying automatic weapons for his court appearance.

Pic: AP
Image:
The media were kept at a distance. Pic: AP

News media were not allowed in for the hearing and reporters were kept behind a gate outside.

Officers had taken the suspect, who has been charged with attempted murder, to his home in the town of Levice on Friday and seized a computer and some documents, according to local media.

The attack sent shockwaves throughout Europe and raised concerns over the already polarised and febrile political situation in Slovakia.

Slovakia's Health Minister Zuzana Dolinkova. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Health minister Zuzana Dolinkova gave the latest update on the PM’s condition. Pic: Reuters

Mr Fico has long been a divisive figure.

His return to power last year on a pro-Russian, anti-American ticket fuelled worries among fellow EU and NATO members over the country’s direction.

Slovakia had previously been one of Ukraine’s staunchest supporters, but on taking office Mr Fico halted arms supplies to the nation battling invading Russian forces.

Thousands of demonstrators have repeatedly rallied in the capital and around the country to protest against his policies.

Continue Reading

World

Bodies of three Israeli hostages killed at music festival recovered in Gaza

Published

on

By

Bodies of three Israeli hostages killed at music festival recovered in Gaza

The bodies of three Israeli hostage taken by Hamas have been recovered in Gaza.

The remains were discovered in an overnight operation carried out by Israel’s military and intelligence agency Shin Bet, said chief military spokesman Daniel Hagari.

Itzhak Gelerenter, 56, Amit Buskila, 28, and Shani Louk, 22, were killed at the Nova music festival on 7 October, with their bodies then taken into Gaza by Hamas militants.

Ms Louk’s body was seen face-down in a pick-up truck travelling through Gaza in a video that was shared widely on social media after the hostages were taken.

Israel-Gaza war latest updates

The Israeli military says it has recovered the body of Shani Louk from Gaza
Image:
Shani Louk

Itzhak Gelerenter was murdered by Hamas on 7 October
Image:
Itzhak Gelerenter

The body of Amit Buskila has been found by the Israeli military
Image:
Amit Buskila

“They were celebrating life in the Nova music festival and they were murdered by Hamas,” said Mr Hagari.

He said their families have been notified.

“Our hearts go out to them, to the families at this difficult time. We will leave no stone unturned, we will do everything in our power to find our hostages and bring them home.”

The military did not give immediate details on where their bodies were found.

Ms Louk’s father has said the return of his daughter’s body to her family has been a form of closure.

Nissim Louk told the Israeli newspaper Haaretz his daughter “radiated light, to her and those who surrounded her, and in her death she still does”.

He added: “She is a symbol of the people of Israel, between light and darkness. Her inner and outer beauty that shone for all the world to see is a special one.”

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

‘No respect’ for the world after Gaza horrors

Read more:
Hostages’ families urge Netanyahu to accept deal
Hamas releases video of hostages

Hostage’s parents tell him ‘stay strong’

In November, the brother of Ms Louk told Sky News of their last phone call as his sister tried to escape Hamas.

Speaking about the video that was circulated online after she was taken, Amit Louk said: “I never thought I was going to be in contact with this type of video, seeing my sister in that brutal position.

“And just in that moment, the whole family just crashed.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the deaths “heartbreaking”, saying: “We will return all of our hostages, both the living and the dead.”

Meanwhile, Professor Hagai Levine, a member of the Hostages and Missing Families Forum, has said the recovery of the bodies is a “painful reminder” of those who are still in captivity.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Child with rare genetic disorder stuck in Gaza

“We do not lose hope. We are preparing for the return of the hostages that are alive,” he added.

Israel has been operating in the Gaza Strip’s southern city of Rafah, where it says it has intelligence that hostages are being held.

Hamas-led militants killed around 1,200 people, mainly civilians, and abducted around 250 others in the 7 October attack.

Around half of those have since been freed, most in swaps for Palestinian prisoners held by Israel during a ceasefire in November.

Israel says around 100 hostages are still captive in Gaza, along with the bodies of around 30 more.

Israel’s campaign in Gaza since the attack has killed more than 35,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza health officials.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Gaza situation ‘a complete disaster’

Mr Netanyahu has vowed to both eliminate Hamas and bring all the hostages back.

He faces pressure to resign, and the US has threatened to scale back its support over the humanitarian situation in Gaza.

Israelis are divided into two main camps: those who want the government to put the war on hold and free the hostages, and others who think the hostages are an unfortunate price to pay for eradicating Hamas.

Continue Reading

World

Slovakia PM shooting: Friend of suspect recalls laughing with him just days before assassination attempt

Published

on

By

Slovakia PM shooting: Friend of suspect recalls laughing with him just days before assassination attempt

Mile L’Udovit is leaning on the front door of his apartment block when we meet, just as he has done so often since moving in four decades ago.

He was one of the original tenants of the tatty building and so was his dear friend Juraj Cintula – the man charged with trying to kill Slovakia’s prime minister.

Mile is at once shocked, bemused, appalled and bewildered.

“He’s a good friend,” he tells me. Both men are 71 years old and talked often. “He was a decent, polite man. A good worker. His wife is a professor and his kids were okay. He had a good reputation. Everything was okay.

“Nobody expected something like this to happen. No one could imagine it. That’s the worst thing about it.

“I spoke to him on Monday and we were having a laugh, like neighbours do. It’s so unpleasant.”

Juraj Cintula is the author of several poetry collections.
Pic: ENEX
Image:
Suspect Juraj Cintula is the author of several poetry collections. Pic: ENEX

Building where the man who shot Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico reportedly lived, in Levice, Slovakia, Thursday, May 16, 2024. Pic: AP Photo/Denes Erdos
Image:
The apartment block where L’Udovit and Cintula have lived for decades. Pic: AP Photo/Denes Erdos

He shakes his head and gestures up to Cintula’s apartment on the top of the building. “He will either die or get a life sentence. It’s going to be so hard for his family.”

Cintula has not yet been officially identified as the suspect, but it’s common knowledge in Slovakia.

Read more:
PM Fico’s background, beliefs and politics
What we know about the shooting suspect

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Video shows moment Slovak PM was shot

Armed police even brought him back to the apartment, dressed in a bulletproof jacket and helmet, to help gather evidence. So why, I ask Mile, did his old friend allegedly try to kill Robert Fico?

“You know, I can’t really say,” he replies thoughtfully. “We took politics as something to laugh at. But we kept our own opinions – he had his, I had mine.

“He was opposed to certain acts of the government and his opinions were quite different. But what was in his mind? Really, nobody knows.”

Continue Reading

Trending