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Anti-Houthi Yemeni fighters harass medics, endanger civilians

By our correspondents
November 24, 2016

DUBAI: Amnesty International accused pro-government Yemeni forces fighting Houthi rebels for control of the southwestern city of Taiz of harassing medical staff and endangering civilians by stationing combatants among them.

Civilians in Taiz, which had a pre-war population of 300,000, have been trapped by intense fighting, with dead bodies lying in the streets and hundreds of people wounded this week, the International Committee of the Red Cross said on Tuesday.

Amnesty, a London-based human rights watchdog, said that so-called Popular Committees - anti-Houthi local militias backed by exiled President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi’s government - had detained and threatened to kill medical staff in Taiz.

Popular Committee fighters hold most of Taiz, Yemen’s third largest city, but are hemmed in by Houthi forces on three sides.

“There is compelling evidence to suggest that anti-Houthi forces have waged a campaign of fear and intimidation against medical professionals in Taiz,” said Philip Luther, research and advocacy director at Amnesty’s Middle East and North Africa wing.

“By positioning fighters and military positions near medical facilities they have compromised the safety of hospitals and flouted their obligation to protect civilians under international law.”

Officials from Hadi’s government said they were studying the Amnesty report and would respond to it.

A Saudi-led coalition has been fighting the Houthis since March 2015 to restore the internationally recognised president, Hadi, who lives in exile in Saudi Arabia.  Hadi supporters control most of Taiz.

But the United Nations has accused Houthi forces enclosing Taiz on three sides of blocking humanitarian supply routes into the city, located some 205-km south of the capital Sanaa.

Rights groups have accused both sides in Taiz of using rockets and mortars in populated residential areas.

Landmines planted by Houthis in Taiz have caused numerous civilian casualties, according to Human Rights Watch.

Amnesty said its researchers had interviewed 15 doctors and other hospital staff in Taiz who described how Popular Committee members had “regularly harassed, detained or even threatened to kill them over the past six months”.

The report cited at least three cases in which hospitals were closed because of threats against staff.

These included an incident on Monday when fighters raided and shut down the city’s biggest public hospital, al-Thawra, apparently for having provided emergency medical treatment to three injured Houthi fighters, according to the report.

It quoted witnesses as saying that three armed men stormed an office at the hospital and threatened to kill medical staff if it was not shut down immediately.  They also tried to drag the two surviving Houthi fighters - one of whom was a minor - out of the hospital’s intensive care and recovery units, but were prevented by medical staff.  The report further quoted the director of al-Thawra hospital as saying fighters had deployed defensive positions, including tanks, around the compound, ignoring pleas by staff and local authorities not to do so.

An air strike by an Arab coalition battling Yemeni rebels killed 12 civilians in the northwest of the country on Wednesday, rebel media and witnesses said.

Six others were wounded in the raid that targeted a vehicle in Hiran, in Hajja province, reported the sabanews.net website that is controlled by Shiite Huthi insurgents.

Witnesses said the victims were on their way to a market.

The raid is part of increased violence in Yemen since a 48-hour ceasefire declared by the Saudi-led coalition, which is fighting the Iran-backed rebels in support of President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi, ended on Monday.

The coalition has come under repeated criticism over civilian casualties during its operations in Yemen.

It admitted in October to killing 140 people in an air strike on a funeral in Sanaa, blaming the deaths on “incorrect information.”

More than 40 people were killed in clashes on Tuesday between the rebels and government forces across the country.

The Huthis overran the capital Sanaa and other parts of the impoverished country in September 2014, prompting the coalition to intervene six months later in support of Hadi. 

The UN says more than 7,000 people have been killed and nearly 37,000 wounded in Yemen since March 2015.