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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, January 6, 2019
As Hodeidah's ceasefire holds, life begins to trickle back into the city
A UN-brokered truce has brought an uneasy peace and some hope to the Yemeni city's residents, just when they feared the worst
A Yemeni boy sells freshly-caught fish in the embattled Red Sea port city of Hodeidah on 1 January (AFP)
Friday 4 January 2019
SANAA - The ceasefire
in Yemen's Hodeidah may be fragile, occasionally threatened by
skirmishes and just days old, but it has breathed new life into the Red
Sea port city.
More and more, people are walking in the streets without fear of bombardment or snipers.
Shutters are rising in abandoned shops, while the once-ubiquitous sounds
of explosions and air strikes have become a scarcity since the truce
took hold on 18 December.
It is a happy outcome for Hodeidah's residents, who, before United
Nations-brokered talks between pro-government forces and Houthi rebels
resulted in the truce, were suffering under a ferocious battle for
control of the city.
Ibrahim Haidar, a pharmacist in Hodeidah, told Middle East Eye that the
city's residents are "inhaling peace" again after more than five months
of violence.
"Peace is the most important issue for us. If there is peaceful
environment, we can work and feed our families. But war is the source of
everything bad," he said.
If there is peaceful environment, we can work and feed our families. But war is the source of everything bad- Ibrahim Haidar, Hodeidah resident
Like many other shopkeepers, Haidar reopened his pharmacy almost
immediately after the UN ceasefire monitoring team arrived in the city
on 23 December.
"People trust the UN, and the presence of the UN team in Hodeidah means
that no party will dare to violate the truce. This has encouraged
displaced people to return and people to resume their investments in the
city," he said.
The UN envoy for Yemen arrived in Sanaa on Saturday for talks to shore up the ceasefire, AFP said.
Martin Griffiths is scheduled to hold talks in Sanaa with Houthi rebel
leaders before visiting Saudi capital Riyadh to meet Yemeni government
officials. Houthi sources said Griffiths would visit Hodeida city on
Sunday.
While in Sanaa he will also meet retired Dutch general Patrick Cammaert,
who has been appointed by the UN to head a truce monitoring team.
Some fighting has broken out since the UN team, led by Cammaert, entered
the city. However, the skirmishes have been limited to Hodeidah's
outskirts, keeping the ceasefire largely unblemished.
Grooms
sit during their weddings on a street of the Red Sea port city of
Hodeidah, days after a ceasefire was ratified by Yemen's warring parties
(Reuters)
Before the ceasefire took hold, Houthis and pro-government forces
battled just a few kilometres from Hodeidah's highly strategic port.
Some 70 percent of all Yemen's food imports and humanitarian aid passes
through the facility, and with 16 million Yemenis currently on the brink
of famine, a humanitarian catastrophe could have erupted were fighting
to reach the port.
Luckily work there has not been interrupted for a single day, and many
basic items remain available in Hodiedah's markets and elsewhere in
Yemen.
"Food items, medicines and all commodities are available in the market," Haidar said.
READ MORE ►
But Yemen is also suffering under a severe economic crisis, with the
rial losing more than half its value since the war broke out in 2015 and
prices rising in tandem.
So not only are many basic items prohibitively expensive for Yemenis,
the battle for Hodeidah has also cost much of the city's population
their jobs.
"The next urgent step, which residents of Hodeidah need, is withdrawal
of warring parties out of the city, so people can resume their work in
fishing, farming and other jobs," Haidar stressed.
Many of Hodeidah's residents are farmers, labourers or fisherman, but the war has devastated agricultural land, impeded fisherman and forced factories to close.
Return from displacement
Since fighting in and around Hodeidah erupted in June, more than half a million people have been displaced, according to the Norwegian Refugee Council.
However, in the past two weeks many of those displaced have returned to their homes after months seeking safety elsewhere.
Nasser al-Buraey, 41, fled his house in Hodeidah's al-Hali district in
July for the rebel-held capital Sanaa after the battles approached his
neighbourhood. Once in Sanaa, he and his family lived inside a school
which has been turned into a camp for the displaced.
"In Sanaa, I lived with my five children and wife inside one classroom,
and we suffered so much trying to get food, medicine and all other
needs," Buraey told MEE.
"Moreover, my children stopped studying because I cannot afford it."
Buraey used to work as a courier in Hodeidah city, but he sold his
motorbike to pay for transportation to Sanaa and some basic items for
his family there.
Now he is unemployed and without any income.
"The camp supervisors used to provide us with meals, but the food was
never enough for us. In all ways life in the camp was worse than life
amid war," he said.
People gather near stalls with used tools on a street in Hodeidah (Reuters)
When Buraey heard about the ceasefire in Hodeidah he became very
optimistic that he could take his family home, who craved the warmth of
the Red Sea city after weeks in wintry Sanaa.
"The ceasefire came at the right time, as the cold of Sanaa in recent
weeks has been unbearable and my children suffered from bad headaches
because of the weather," Buraey said.
"I was cautious about returning to my house, but when the UN team
arrived to Hodeidah, immediately next day I returned my house."
I was cautious about returning to my house, but when the UN team arrived to Hodeidah, immediately next day I returned my house- Nasser al-Buraey, Hodeidah resident
Though Buraey is now unemployed in Hodeidah, he is happy to be home. His
friends occasionally give him some work to do in the market, so he has
just enough money to buy food for his family.
Humanitarian organisations play an important role in helping Hodeidah's
residents, and according to Haidar their presence in the city has
increased following the ceasefire.
"When the fierce clashes arrived to the city some organisations fled the
city before us, which was a normal result of the battles. But when
people started to return the city, the organisations resumed their
work," he said.
"Some organsations reopened their offices in the city and, most importantly, we began to receive food and other basic items."
Safety in Sanaa
Not all people displaced from Hodeidah city have returned to their homes.
Many are still scattered across several provinces, as their houses lie between the Houthi and the pro-government forces lines.
Abu Mohammed fled his house near Hodeidah's airport in July when the
area became an early front line in the pro-government assault on the
Houthi-held city.
Now he and seven of his family live in a small tent buffeted by winds near Sanaa's old city.
He has not returned to Hodeidah because his house is between the two warring parties.
"No one wants to live inside a tent in this cold weather, but we cannot
return to our house and the only choice is to live inside a tent," he
said.
A woman displaced from the Red Sea port city of Hodeidah looks from a tent shelter in Sanaa (Reuters)
Abu Mohammed is thinking about going back and pitching up a tent in
Hodeidah. He is unemployed, so cannot afford to rent a home in the city.
He's concerned, though, that there are many needy people in Hodeidah and
fewer humanitarian groups and initiatives present, so it might be more
difficult to feed his family.
''There are some people in Sanaa who know my suffering and they help me
with food, but in Hodeidah I may not find people to help me," he said.
"Peace is not enough for me unless there is food for my family."
READ MORE►
Abu Mohammed used to work as a labourer in Hodeidah’s markets, but now
he depends on charitable people to help him find food. Sometimes he begs
people in mosques to help him with money to buy some commodities for
his family.
Back in Hodeidah, Haidar hopes things will only improve further, so wealth and more displaced people can return to the city.
The ceasefire is the first step towards a peaceful solution, he noted.
"This is the first time that the warring parties adhered to a ceasefire,
so I hope this is the first step towards the implementation of the
outcomes of peace talks that can lead to the end of the war," he said.