Saudi Arabia’s war in Yemen
Uglier by the day
Aid agencies fear mass deaths as a Sunni coalition bombs a Shia rebel stronghold
Reports from residents of Saada say that the bombing has been relentless. "Homes, schools, everything has been destroyed," says a Houthi supporter in the capital who has friends and family in Saada. Aid workers say the bombardment will probably lead to a “mass loss of life”.
John Kerry, America's secretary of state, says that "a humanitarian catastrophe is building". Though America is helping the campaign with intelligence and logistics, it is growing wary of a war that seems ill-thought and increasingly ugly.
Mortars and rockets struck Najran, a Saudi town near the Yemeni border, two days ago, killing at least one Saudi soldier. The coalition began to issue warnings that it would treat the entire province of Saada, the Houthi heartland on the other side of the border, as a military target. It told the region’s 1m inhabitants to evacuate.
Aid agencies denounced what they saw as the collective punishment of Yemenis for the Houthis’ intransigence. Some say the strikes may constitute war crimes.
“It is impossible for the entire population of Saada province to leave within hours,” says Llanos Ortiz, an emergency coordinator at Médecins Sans Frontieres, an aid agency. “Many people have no transport or fuel due to the coalition's blockade. Many others have no access to information because the province’s phone networks are barely operational.”
Leading a coalition of other Sunni states, the recently enthroned Saudi king, Salman, and his son, Muhammad, serving as defence minister, launched the air campaign on March 26th. It aimed to push back the Zaydi Shia Houthi militia that had swept the recognised government of President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi out of the capital, Sana’a, and was advancing rapidly south towards the port of Aden, where Mr Hadi had sought refuge.
The Houthis, backed by army units loyal to the former president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, are regarded by Saudi Arabia and its allies as a client of Iran.
Yet the campaign has not prevented the Houthis from taking more territory. It has also left more than 1,200 people dead, more than half of whom were civilians, according to the World Health Organisation.
Nearly half of Yemen's 24m people are now dangerously hungry, according to the UN. The coalition's naval blockade has stopped most food and fuel getting into the country. Tankers are close to the port of Hodeidah—the second biggest port after Aden and the scene of heavy fighting—but the coalition has kept them away, arguing that they would help the Houthis.
Yemen depends on fuel to transport food, 90% of which is imported and transported overland, and water, which is mainly pumped from underground aquifers using diesel pumps.
“They are calling it a ceasefire, but they are continuing to blockade 24m people while intensifying their bombing campaign,” a frustrated aid official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. “This looks like yet another way of getting around pressure from America. They are playing a double game—doing one thing while feeding the international community a line.”
America has grown frustrated with broken promises by the Saudis to halt the fighting. In April the Saudis announced an end to the campaign, dubbed Operation Decisive Storm. But no sooner was the announcement made than the bombing resumed, after the Houthis took control of an army base that had remained loyal to the government.

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