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ReCivilians wounded and killed in indiscriminate frontline hostilities in Yemen

Civilians wounded and killed in indiscriminate frontline hostilities

  • Renewed conflict on the frontlines to the South of Hodeidah Port on Yemen’s Red Sea Coast is intense and rising numbers of  civilians need war-trauma surgery.
  • Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) teams have treated 122 war-wounded patients in our trauma hospital in nearby Mocha since October.
  • Since the last week of November, the majority of severely wounded patients have been women and children.

Brussels  - Renewed conflict on the frontlines to the south of Hodeidah Port on Yemen’s Red Sea Coast has become among the most intense in the country, and the number of civilians needing major war-trauma surgery is rising.

Since October, the MSF trauma hospital in the nearby town of Mocha has treated 122 war-wounded patients – but since the last week of November, there has been a distinct change, with the vast majority of severely wounded patients being women and children.

When it’s suddenly almost all civilians coming with terrible weapons wounds, that raises serious questions. Raphael Veicht, MSF head of mission in Yemen

“We treat everyone needing emergency surgery in our Mocha trauma centre – war wounded, traffic accident victims, and pregnant women needing emergency surgical delivery,” says Raphael Veicht, MSF head of mission.

“But when it’s suddenly almost all civilians coming with terrible weapon wounds, that raises serious questions. What we are seeing in our small hospital is disturbing, and outrageous. Killing and wounding civilians in conflict not only constitutes a severe violation of International Humanitarian Law. It goes further than that; our patients include children, pregnant women, breastfeeding mothers, and men working in a milk-bottling factory that was hit by shelling - and there is nothing that can justify this.”

A woman was brought to the MSF hospital on 29 November with a rough life-saving amputation already done to both her lower legs, requiring corrective surgery. She described how she had joined other women and children, many of them her relatives, to attend a clothing sale in a house in their village of Al Qazah, in the district of ad Durayhimi. She does not know exactly what happened, but there was an explosion – her father afterwards told her that it was a shell that landed on them – and she woke up in the MSF hospital. The house was made of reeds and palm leaves, so provided no protection whatsoever. The woman lists her relatives who were killed in the attack:

“Four women:  my aunt; my brother’s wife; two of my female cousins;

Five children: my brother’s son; two cousins, and two children of other cousins.”

From this shelling attack, the MSF Mocha hospital also treated one other patient, and stabilised an 11-month-old child who needed to be immediately referred by ambulance to the more advanced MSF hospital in Aden. The child died before reaching Aden.

 

Whether targeted or indiscriminate, these attacks breach all the rules of war. No. More. Civilians. Raphael Veicht, MSF head of mission in Yemen

On 24 November, the MSF Mocha hospital received seven civilian patients wounded when a roadside bomb exploded as they returned from a wedding. Reportedly five people were killed in the explosion, including a child.

ReCivilians wounded and killed in indiscriminate frontline hostilities in Yemen
The MSF Mocha trauma hospital is a strictly no-weapons zone. It is vital to maintain a safe place for impartial care to all patients needing urgent emergency or surgical medical treatment. Yemen, September 2020.
Hareth Mohammed/MSF

On 25 November, two children found an unexploded munition on the roadside and were brought to MSF after it exploded when they threw it to the ground; they had severe abdominal and chest trauma wounds.

On 3 December, MSF admitted six people wounded when a milk-bottling factory in Hudaydah was shelled – the patients say at least ten of their co-workers were killed in the strike.

The influxes of weapon-wounded patients to our hospital provide a confirmation that the frontlines in southern Hodeidah governorate are currently among the most active in the whole of Yemen. The intensifying conflict is also forcing hundreds of families to flee once again from their homes, and the expansion of areas at risk of shelling or other attacks means essential healthcare and food assistance is increasingly limited at the time when it is most needed.

“Whether targeted or indiscriminate, these attacks breach all the rules of war,” says Veicht.  “No. More. Civilians. People just trying to get by, trying to survive, trying to be good mothers or fathers or brothers or sisters – these people are being killed and maimed, and that just has to stop.”

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