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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, December 29, 2015
Schools of war: Yemen's education system seized to train new fighters
Exclusive: Pro-government forces are converting rural Taiz schools into military camps to boost war against the Houthis
New pro-government recruits drill in Taiz (AFP)
Awadh al-Thobhani lectures new recruits (Anonymous)
Exclusive: Pro-government forces are converting rural Taiz schools into military camps to boost war against the Houthis
Al-Turbah, Yemen - Awadh al-Thobhani stands
on a table as dozens of recruits gather round for their first lessons
in war. The former Yemen army captain, with a pistol slung on his hip,
has come to Taiz province to train the next generation of the 'popular
resistance' to fight the Houthi movement.
But this building in rural of al-Turbah, 70km from Taiz city, was not
always a military base. Before Thobhani and his men came it was school,
and some of those around Thobani were students. Now they are preparing
for war.
"I have been fighting the Houthis for about eight months, and when I
knew that there were a large number in Taiz who wanted to join the
resistance, I decided to leave the battle and return to my village to
recruit new fighters," Thobhani told Middle East Eye.
By the end of January, he says, the mass of men gathered here at Abdulraqeeb Abdulwahab school will be sent to the frontlines.
But Thobhani's task is tall - while training lasts for 10 hours a day,
for which recruits are paid $5, the vast majority of men are raw and, by
Thobhani's own admission, will not be professionals when they leave for
battle.
"Right now not all of the recruits have Kalashnikovs, and we do not
train them in different kinds of weapons," he tells Middle East Eye.
"But when they join the battle, they will learn how to use other kinds
of weapons and they will get Kalashnikovs."
It is a
damning indictment on peace talks in Switzerland between the
Saudi-backed Yemen government and the Houthis, which spluttered to
nothing earlier this month. With a ceasefire in tatters and fighting
intensifying in Taiz and other areas of the country, both the Houthis
and forces loyal to President Adb Rabbuh Mansour Hadi are rushing men
into battle.
And the drills at Abdulwahab are hardly an outlier - since November, 10
other schools in rural Taiz have been taken over by the 'popular
resistance' for use as military camps, according to a source in the
local education office.
It is a move that threatens to not only extend the fighting, but also engulf peaceful rural areas in the violence.
Last Thursday, the Houthis fired two Katyusha rockets at al-Ahd al-Gadid
school, another in al-Turbah that is being used by the popular
resistance. Two children and two women were injured as the missiles fell
short and hit their houses.
Aden Fadhl al-Rabei, a political analyst and the head of Madar Strategic
Studies Centre, told MEE that the warring sides usually use rural areas
to recruit new fighters. "If the Houthis know the camps of the resistance, definitely they will target them."
But he added that schools were being taken over by both sides for use as military camps.
"Both sides
use them for training, not only the resistance," he said. "The Houthis
are using schools in rural areas of Imran province and other northern
provinces, and have forced the students to join the war. MEE cannot
verify if students were forced into service.
Such a
strategy will also have a long-term effect on the youth of Yemen, as
hundreds of students are forced out of education and school
infrastructure is targeted.
The source inside the education office told MEE: "The warring parties
must let the students study and they must stop using schools as military
camps - this step will make the schools targets," he added.
However, Abdullah Saeed, another trainer at Abdulwahab school, said the
war against the Houthis must take precedence over everything else.
"The resistance does not have another place for the recruits, but the
students can study at other schools, so the education office should not
bother us," he told MEE.
Many residents do not share his views.
One women, Um Ayman, who lives near Abdulwahab school, said: "The
residents of al-Turbah are not Houthis but they are not loyalists to
Hadi. We are independent people who want to be safe and keep our area
far from the conflict.
"If the recruits are not here, the Houthis will not target al-Turbah.
The resistance would be held responsible for any fighting in al-Turbah."