From VOA:
“First Commercial Flight From
Yemen Carries Medical Patients to Jordan”
(A Yemen Airways plane is greeted
with water canon salute at Sanaa Airport as the first commercial flight in
around six years, in Sanaa, Yemen, May 16, 2022.)
The first commercial flight in
nearly six years took off from Yemen’s Sanaa airport for the Jordanian capital,
Amman, on Monday, carrying hospital patients needing treatment abroad.
Observers say the airport's reopening is a major step forward in a fragile
peace process in the conflict which has been grinding on for the past seven
years. The United Nations says the conflict in Yemen, pitting a Saudi-led
coalition supporting the government against the Iran-backed Houthi rebels, has
created a humanitarian catastrophe in the impoverished nation at the tip of the
Arabian Peninsula. More than 23 million Yemenis across the country need
humanitarian help. The war has also threatened security in the Persian Gulf. The
resumption of flights from Sanaa's airport, which is held by the Houthi rebels,
is part of an U.N.-brokered two-month cease-fire that went into effect in early
April. The airport had been closed to commercial traffic since August of 2016.
Bruce Riedel, a senior fellow at
the Washington-based Brookings Institution, said such commercial flights are
necessary to allow Yemenis, particularly those with health issues, to receive
treatment abroad, given the country’s weak medical infrastructure. “The U.N. is
also trying to get a Yemeni passport office established in Sanaa that both
parties will agree can certify and issue appropriate documents,” he said. Jasmin
Lavoie, the media coordinator for the Norwegian Refugee Council in Yemen, told
VOA that Monday’s flight is “a stepping-stone towards a lasting peace for
Yemen.” “This is one of the main things that had to be settled during that
two-months truce," he said. "We’re also hearing that other flights
can happen as soon as next Wednesday. It means that Yemenis can seek medical
treatment abroad. It will be easier, cheaper to bring goods in and out of
Yemen.”
(People queue at the departures
lounge to board the first commercial flight to be operated from Sanaa Airport,
in Sanaa, Yemen, May 16, 2022.)
There are tens of thousands of
Yemenis outside the country due to the conflict, Lavoie said. He added that the
truce has also called for the opening of the roads in the heavily disputed Taiz
region and other governorates. His and other international agencies are calling
for this and other truce provisions to be realized. “We’ve been witnessing some
encouraging things. Some NGOs have been able to access some places that were
not accessible for more than three years to conduct needs assessments and help
people," Lavoie said. "We saw a reduction in civilian casualties in
the first month of the truce. So, these are really encouraging, but we
obviously need more.” Brookings’ Riedel said the “next big step is to get the
cease-fire extended indefinitely.” The U.N. says extending the truce, the first
inclusive cease-fire in the war since 2016, would make possible broader
political negotiations to end the conflict that has killed tens of thousands of
Yemenis.
^ I’m glad the plane with medical
patients was able to leave Yemen and hope the ceasefire will hold and things
can become more safe and stable there. ^
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