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Thread: The Starvation of Yemen

  1. #151
    7mn people face starvation as Yemen heads towards man-made famine –



    The situation in war-ravaged Yemen is starting to resemble a man-made famine, with almost seven million people “knowingly” pushed towards starvation, the latest report from the international humanitarian organization Oxfam says.
    The ongoing “complex and bloody [civil] war” between the Houthi rebels and forces loyal to ousted President Mansur Hadi has led to the deaths of thousands, as the conflict peaked in 2015, the paper says. Attempts by the Saudi-led coalition to drive back the Houthis have only added to the plight of the people.

    Over the past year, “airstrikes and fighting” have led to the deaths of around 7,600 people, with an average of 70 deaths a day, Oxfam said, calling on the world to not ignore the misery in the region.

    “The world is now confronting… the largest humanitarian crisis since the creation of the United Nations, with more than 20 million people facing starvation and famine in South Sudan, Nigeria, Somalia and Yemen.”

    Yemen, already the “poorest country in the region” prior to the conflict, has been sliding deeper into chaos and poverty over the past two years. The Saudi-led coalition forces “knowingly” worsen it, according to the report.

    “Ports, roads and bridges, along with warehouses, farms and markets have been regularly destroyed by the Saudi-led coalition, draining the country’s food stocks,” the paper says. It also casts some blame for the misery on the Houthi rebels, who it claims are “delaying the delivery of life-saving relief, and sometimes detaining aid workers.”

    “This, coupled with a flattened economy, has created an abyss of hunger and a serious threat of famine.”

    Currently, an estimated 17 million people, or 60 percent of the population, do not have reliable access to sufficient quantities of nutritious food, the report emphasized. The document went on to provide heartbreaking examples.

    “Oxfam surveyed 2000 families of Internally Displaced People (IDPs) in Hajjah Governorate, between November and December 2016, and found 85 percent of respondents were going hungry. These families, who were forced to flee their homes because of the conflict, have lost everything they had.”

    The organization met with 51-year-old Rabii, who was forced to escape the fighting with his wife and 11 children, feeling to Hajjah Governorate.

    “I’ve been living in a hut for two years, which doesn’t protect us from the cold winter and the summer rain. We had no choice though, because my village was under the bombs, we left to save the children. At the beginning, I had some money by selling the few sheep I had left. But for the past six months, I have no money at all. Sometimes the farmers I work with give me some flour but it’s not enough for my big family.”

    This is not the first time that Oxfam has warned the world community about the threat. One year ago, the organization said that Yemen was being pushed towards famine. Also, in October, World Food Programme’s director in Yemen, Torben Due, said that “an entire generation could be crippled by hunger.”

    Read more
    A father reacts while looking at the body of his child who was killed in an airstrike, during a battle between Iraqi forces and Islamic State militants, in Mosul, Iraq March 17, 2017. © Thaier Al-Sudani Western MSM ignoring 'unworthy civilian victims' of US-led Mosul attacks
    The latest report noted that due to hunger, lack of water and sanitation, with the people’s immune systems weakening, cholera broke out in October 2016.

    “Six months later, there are over 22,000 suspected cases across 15 governorates and at least 100 people have died so far.” UNICEF also said that “63,000 children died in 2016 from preventable causes linked to malnutrition,” as cited in the report.

    This February, the UN launched the 2017 Humanitarian Response Plan, with a humanitarian appeal of $2.1 billion for Yemen, a 30-percent increase compared to 2016. The plan, however, is now only seven-percent funded.

    Russia extensively contributes to the relief effort in the war-torn country, repeatedly sending hundreds of parcels with essential foods like flour, rice, butter, and sugar, distributed in the Yemeni capital, Sana.

    “We’re grateful for this help to the Russian people that helps us to overcome this crisis. For this humanitarian aid. Only Russia helps us,” a local woman told RT Arabic.

    “I wish other organizations collaborated with our people,” a local man lamented, while others also thanked the Russian people for the help.
    https://www.rt.com/news/382157-yemen...rvation-oxfam/
    "The Patriarch"



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  3. #152
    Sounds like a holocaust is being carried out by US and company.

    Wow, not a peep from the MSM, surprise, surprise



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  5. #153
    "Let it not be said that we did nothing." - Dr. Ron Paul. "Stand up for what you believe in, even if you are standing alone." - Sophie Magdalena Scholl
    "War is the health of the State." - Randolph Bourne "Freedom is the answer. ... Now, what's the question?" - Ernie Hancock.

  6. #154
    The Enduring Shame of Two Years of U.S. Support for the War on Yemen
    By DANIEL LARISON • March 24, 2017,



    This weekend will be the second anniversary of the start of the Saudi-led intervention in Yemen, and it has been even more disastrous and harmful than opponents feared it would be:

    The United Nations warned this month that Yemen represents “the largest humanitarian crisis in the world.”

    As it usually does, outside intervention in Yemen’s local conflict greatly intensified and prolonged the war. It has also caused enormous suffering for the civilian population through an indiscriminate bombing campaign and the systematic devastation of the country’s economy and infrastructure. The war and the coalition blockade have predictably produced a horrific humanitarian crisis that now threatens to claim the lives of millions of people if nothing is done to prevent famine. The failure of the U.S.-backed, Saudi-led intervention was both likely and foreseeable from the start: the coalition was pursuing highly ambitious and unrealistic political goals, but lacked the means to achieve them. After two years of senseless carnage and destruction, the coalition has clearly failed in all of its stated goals, and the only thing it has accomplished is to ruin Yemen and starve its people.

    Throughout this disgraceful campaign, the U.S. has been unstinting in its assistance as the Saudis and their allies destroy their poorer neighbor. No American interest has been served by this, and none could be, since the people being targeted by the coalition’s bombs and blockade have never done anything to us and posed no threat to us. The U.S. has enabled a shameful and atrocious war, and it has all been for nothing. Worse still, the U.S. did this despite having no obligation to aid any of the governments waging this war. This was not something that our government was bound by treaty to do, but something that the previous and current administrations have chosen to do because they could.

    The Saudi-led war on Yemen has always been indefensible and unjust because it was always much more likely to cause greater evils than it prevented (it and has caused some truly great evils), and it was always unnecessary. It has also proved to be a disastrous miscalculation by the Saudis and their allies, who are frittering away their resources on a war they can’t win but are too embarrassed to quit. Far from countering a serious threat to Saudi security, the intervention has created one by triggering retaliatory strikes inside Saudi territory. The Saudis didn’t face an “existential threat” from Yemen, but plunged recklessly into a war without considering the pitfalls of intervention, and the U.S. stupidly helped them to do that. Uncritically backing our reckless clients leads to disaster for the clients and enduring shame for us, and millions of innocent civilians are paying the price so that our government can “reassure” a few despots and indulge their paranoia. http://www.theamericanconservative.c...-war-on-yemen/
    "The Patriarch"

  7. #155
    Thanks you guys for keeping a thread active about this.

    So much to say. Imperialist/globalist forces destroying Yemen's agriculture self-sufficiency. Then Yemen's US-backed dictator Saleh losing control in 2009. Chaos ensues.

    Sure, rulers through history were exactly this power-mad and ruthless, but technology has so greatly expanded their reach for causing suffering..

    Don't worry, our kind overlords will soon remove the sources of this news which disturbs and offends the 5% of us who care about other people....

  8. #156
    I have some problems with the stories in the media about the present genocide in Yemen.
    I read in lots of articles that it’s the Saudi led coalition that’s committing war crimes against Yemen, violating international humanitarian laws.
    It looks like Saudi Arabia is committing genocide in Yemen on the orders of Britain and the USA. In this way Britain and the US can claim they’re not responsible for the starvation of Yemen.

    Then all the warnings about the health care system on the verge of collapse.
    There are millions of Yemenis that don’t have not enough food to eat, clean water to drink and no fuel. I can tell from personal experience that in such a situation you don’t need doctors…

    The United Nations passed a Security Council resolution that demanded the unconditional surrender of the Houthis.
    The United Nations is apparently an accomplice to this genocide, so why doesn’t anybody name the (terrorist) UN for what it is?

    I’ve read reports that more than 10,000 civilians in Yemen have died because of the bombs by Saudi Arabia. Much more than that is dying because of starvation.
    Let’s do the math.
    At least one child dies every 10 minutes in Yemen.
    More than 6 per hour.
    More than 144 per day.
    More than 1000 per week.
    More than 4320 per month.
    More than 52,500 per year.
    Since December 2016 the famine in Yemen has become even worse.

    British Defence Secretary Michael Fallon answered to questions about Britain selling arms to Saudi Arabia that are used against Yemen:
    The government’s view is absolutely clear, that what Saudi Arabia is entitled to do is to defend itself from these attacks across its own border. It’s had—its cities in the south of Saudi Arabia have been shelled by the Houthis. It’s perfectly entitled to defend itself. And it’s also leading the coalition to restore the legitimate government of Yemen” - https://www.democracynow.org/2016/12...g_the_us_could
    This article has already been posted in this thread.

    Already in April 2015 (that’s almost a year ago!) the food supplies across Yemen were running out, and petrol stations empty. As the blockade continues, the country’s food shortage will become even more severe.
    Yemen Economic Corporation, one of Yemen’s largest food storage centres, was destroyed by 3 missiles of the coalition: http://www.thenational.ae/world/midd...-amid-conflict

    Attacks on electricity and water installations as well as food storage centres will inevitably cause severe harm to civilians : https://www.hrw.org/news/2015/05/18/...wed-violations

    In January 2016, Saudi Arabian foreign minister Adel al-Jubeir had a meeting with British ministers and US secretary of state, John Kerry. After this meeting Jubeir told reporters not to worry about violations of international humanitarian law, because British and American military officials are in the command and control centre for Saudi airstrikes on Yemen.
    Jubeir said that Saudi Arabia’s partners are satisfied with the protection of civilians. He used comments by British minister Philip Hammond, who the same week told parliament that British officers are working with the Saudi military to make sure they don’t violate international humanitarian law.
    According to the UK Ministry of Defence: British forces are in the operation room to provide training and advice “on best practice targeting techniques to help ensure continued compliance with international humanitarian law”.
    This really confirms that the attacks on Yemen are according to the master plan of these psychopaths...
    The Campaign Against the Arms Trade (CAAT) has started legal proceedings against the UK Department for Business, Innovation and Skills, which has approved export licences for the weapon sales to Saudi Arabia, accusing it of failing to prevent violations of international humanitarian law.
    Britain has sold some £5.6bn in arms exports over the last 5 years: https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...-strikes-yemen

    According to Reuters in 2015 it was France that sold the most weapons to Saudi Arabia worth $18 billion, while the USA “only” sold $5.9 billion and Britain $4 billion: http://www.reuters.com/article/us-ye...-idUSKCN10X1MM

    When the UK secretary of State for International Trade Liam Fox was having doubts about authorising export licences for arms to Saudi Arabia. On 8 November 2016, UK foreign secretary Boris Johnson sent Fox a letter:
    I am aware you have deferred a decision on four export licence applications to supply the Royal Saudi Air Force with equipment which could be used in the conflict in Yemen (...) The issue is extremely finely balanced, but I judge at present the Saudis appear committed both to improving processes and to taking action to address failures/individual incidents (...) the clear risk threshold for refusal … has not yet been reached”.
    After this letter Fox swiftly approved the arms sales to Saudi Arabia: https://www.rt.com/uk/376974-boris-j...saudi-weapons/
    Boris Johnson was part of the infamous Bullingdon club at the same time as Nat Rothschild and David Cameron…

    Tariq Riebl, an aid worker for an international humanitarian organisation stated:
    I witnessed about a thousand air strikes. Some of them were very close. I almost burst my eardrum in one”. In Sanaa the strikes lasted up to five hours, “You’d have that four to six times a day. It would start randomly. It was the middle of the night, middle of the day, morning, night, afternoon, anytime. Consistently on holidays, on Fridays, in the middle of prayer time, market days (…)
    Let’s be very clear, the civilian targeting is absolutely astounding. I’ve seen hospitals, mosques, marketplaces, restaurants, power plants, universities, residential houses, just bombed, office buildings, bombed. Everything is a target. In Saada, there were dead donkeys on the side of all the main roads because the Saudis were hitting donkey carts. In Hajjah, the water tank in one of the towns got hit, and it sits on a lonesome little hill
    ” - http://harpers.org/archive/2016/09/a...sses/?single=1
    This last article has already been posted in this thread.

    According to the Guardian in July 2015, 20 million Yemenis are in need of aid.
    The expected winners of the genocide in Yemen are Isis and al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP): https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...-houthi-rebels

    Here are pictures of a Yemeni baby and girl with severe malnutrition.


  9. #157
    So Firestarter, what do you think about the people who are orchestrating and hiding this war crime?

  10. #158
    They’re psychopaths, and it’s certainly not the first time that millions of people have been starved to death.
    It is mostly the same small group of families that have been orchestrating these kinds of atrocities for a couple of generations. I believe that these psychopaths teach their kids to become just like themselves.

    In 1932, 1933 the Ukraine in the Soviet Union of Joseph Stalin was effectively starved – the Holodomor – in which an estimated 7 to 10 million were killed: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holodomor

    Maybe the best kept secret genocide of the 20th century is the Morgenthau plan, which according to history falsification was never executed.
    After Europe was “liberated” by the allied forces, some of the concentration camps were used to lock up German soldiers; 4.16 million POWs were forced to slave labour, without respecting the Geneva Convention, of which around 1.4 million died.
    From 1945 till 1950 Germany was effectively starved by the allies, an estimated 9 million Germans died including many children.

    The American General George Patton thought that the Germans were treated unfairly, he died in a suspicious “accident”: http://www.mujahidkamran.com/articles.php?id=33
    Do NOT ever read my posts. Google and Yahoo wouldn’t block them without a very good reason: Google-censors-the-world/page3

    The Order of the Garter rules the world: Order of the Garter and the Carolingian dynasty

  11. #159
    Washington to Escalate Starvation of Yemen
    http://www.moonofalabama.org/

    yesterday's rally in Sanaa,Yemen where up to 1 million people were condemning the war Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, the UK and the U.S. have been waging on them for two years.Nether the New York Times nor the Washington Post reported of the million strong rally….

    The U.S. takes part in the war because ... well - noone knows:...
    The Saudis claim their coalition has dropped 90,000 bombs during the two year war. That are 123 bombs per day. 5 each and every hour for no good reason. It hasn't helped them at all. … The U.S. provides planing, intelligence, air-refueling and the ammunition for the Saudi bombing. Without U.S. support this war would not happen at all!

    The United Nation claims that the death toll of the war is a mere 5,000.Others speak of 7-8,000. These numbers are laughable. One Saudi attack alone, a "double tap" on a Sanaa funeral hall,killed more than 800. The real death toll of the war is by now likely beyond 100,000. …

    Yemenis starving. Even before the war 90% of Yemen's staple food was imported. The Saudis have since bombed each and every food production facility, chicken farm and port. All larger bridges have been cut.There is no longer any way to import food into the capital Sanaa and the other areas the Saudis besiege. Too small official relief efforts are still running through the Hodeida porton the western coast. The port itself is controlled by the Houthi/Saudi alliance the Saudi want to eliminate. But the port is blockaded from the water side. The Saudis navy and air force destroys all ship who try to enter or leave it.Some official relief ships are allowed to pass but they have difficulties to unload. All large cranes in the harbor have been destroyed by air attacks.

    Still- to deliberately starve off all of the 17 million Yemenis who are"food insecure", i.e. extremely hungry and nearly starved, the port needs to be closed down for good. That is why the UAE and the Saudi plan to invade, conquer and occupy it.

    The Pentagon is now requesting a free hand to help the Saudis to conquer and occupy the Hodeida harbor. Why the U.S. would do this? Well - the reason is at least as good as the one given two years ago … if the U.S. does not "help"(i.e. organizes) to close down the last source of food for the millions besieged by the Saudis then it may not be able to understand what that means. Now there is a really good reason to put boots on the ground! "Unless we do it, we will not know the consequences and that is something we would want to know, right?"

    "Let it not be said that we did nothing." - Dr. Ron Paul. "Stand up for what you believe in, even if you are standing alone." - Sophie Magdalena Scholl
    "War is the health of the State." - Randolph Bourne "Freedom is the answer. ... Now, what's the question?" - Ernie Hancock.

  12. #160
    Aid Officials Beg Congress to Help Yemen, While Trump Sends More Bombs

    AS THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION resumes weapons shipments to Saudi Arabia for its devastating bombing campaign in Yemen — including precision-guided weapons the Obama administration had suspended on human rights grounds — a State Department official told Congress that the two-year-long conflict has led to the largest starvation emergency in the world.

    Gregory Gottlieb, an acting assistant administrator for the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Wednesday that the conflict — which the U.S. is a silent partner to — has left the majority of the Yemeni people struggling to find food.

    “In Yemen, more than 17 million people — an astounding 60 percent of the country’s population — are food insecure, including 7 million that are unable to survive without food assistance,” said Gottlieb. “This makes Yemen the largest food security emergency in the world.”

    Gottlieb was testifying at a Senate hearing on foreign aid funding and humanitarian crises in Nigeria, South Sudan, Yemen, and Somalia.

    USAID is the foreign assistance arm of the State Department — the same department that signs off on arms sales to Saudi Arabia. Since Saudi Arabia began bombing Yemen in March 2015, the U.S. has approved more than $20 billion in weapons sales to Saudi Arabia — and looked the other way as the Saudi-led coalition has bombed civilian infrastructure, hospitals, and children’s schools.

    Last week the UN warned that the majority of Yemen’s population is suffering and on the brink of famine. Stephen O’Brien, the UN’s undersecretary-general for humanitarian affairs, criticized both sides of the conflict for restricting the flow of aid, but said that the Saudi-imposed naval blockade was particularly devastating for the desert country, which imports most of its food.

    The Saudi-led coalition has persistently attacked fisherman, who account for another major food source in Yemen.

    More at link https://theintercept.com/2017/03/22/...ds-more-bombs/
    "The Patriarch"



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  14. #161
    You guys are good folks. Cheers.

  15. #162
    "Let it not be said that we did nothing." - Dr. Ron Paul. "Stand up for what you believe in, even if you are standing alone." - Sophie Magdalena Scholl
    "War is the health of the State." - Randolph Bourne "Freedom is the answer. ... Now, what's the question?" - Ernie Hancock.

  16. #163
    Citizen attempts "citizens arrest" of Saudi General visiting London
    "Let it not be said that we did nothing." - Dr. Ron Paul. "Stand up for what you believe in, even if you are standing alone." - Sophie Magdalena Scholl
    "War is the health of the State." - Randolph Bourne "Freedom is the answer. ... Now, what's the question?" - Ernie Hancock.

  17. #164
    Since February 28, the US military carried out 70 airstrikes on Yemen, according to experts double the total for 2016.
    The strikes were mostly carried out by drones and supposedly targeted: fighters, infrastructure, fighting positions and equipment.

    According to Pentagon spokesman Capt Jeff Davis:
    We continue to target Al-Qaeda in Yemen, and this is done in the interest of disrupting this terror organisation that presents a very significant threat to the United States.
    (…)
    Since February 28, we’ve conducted more than 70 precision airstrikes against AQAP militants’ infrastructure, fighting positions and equipment
    ”.

    Davis said the strikes were targeting Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), the supposed most lethal branch: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/wo...-a7666676.html

    Sometimes I can’t really tell the difference between genocide and fighting terrorism.
    Do NOT ever read my posts. Google and Yahoo wouldn’t block them without a very good reason: Google-censors-the-world/page3

    The Order of the Garter rules the world: Order of the Garter and the Carolingian dynasty

  18. #165

    Vaccines, IMF, World Bank

    I feel all warm inside now that I know that the United Nations is really helping Yemen.
    The UN has launched a campaign in February 2017 to vaccinate 5 million Yemeni children with polio, with the help of the World Bank, UNICEF and WHO.

    According to Ms. Meritxell Relaño of UNICEF: Every minute, the situation of Yemen’s children gets worse. It is unacceptable that children in Yemen are dying of preventable diseases. This is why, together with partners, we are sparing no effort to save more lives
    Ms. Sandra Bloemenkamp of the World Bank stated: The World Bank is committed to investing in children’s health, which is a vital investment in the country’s future, through working with our UN partners in Yemen and strengthening the local health institutions .

    They have even been so considerate to deliver fuel, generators and solar-powered refrigerators to keep vaccines at a constant cool temperature: http://ye.one.un.org/content/unct/ye...-war-torn.html

    I have estimated on the information available that more than 52,000 children will die because of famine in a year. While millions of Yemenis don’t have food to eat, clean water to drink, or fuel, they can rest assured that the UN does everything they can to eradicate wild polio…
    If thousands of Yemenis will die, while hundreds of thousands get paralysed because of the vaccines this will surely make Yemen a better place.

    According to the UN “Vaccination is one of the safest and most cost effective health interventions to protect children from potentially fatal and debilitating diseases”.
    I guess the UN has never heard that food, clean water and fuel are more cost effective health interventions than vaccines…


    I suspected that the destruction of Yemen has been orchestrated by the terrorist IMF and World Bank: destroying countries under the guise of help.
    The IMF and World Bank have been helping Yemen to destruction since at least the 1990s.
    I have found a plan that details the strategy of the IMF and World Bank from 1999 to 2001 for Yemen: https://www.imf.org/external/np/pfp/...en/index.htm#I

    First a short summary of this strategy.
    The dirt poor Yemen must pay off their “debts” to the banks by increasing tax collection, while at the same time increasing prices. For example in 2005 protests broke out when the Yemeni government guided by the World Bank increased the prices of oil, diesel and gas with respectively 100, 200 and 50 per cent: https://www.dawn.com/news/148827/wb-...riots-in-yemen
    Increase the power of the legal system to protect the financial institutions
    Decrease subsidy, so what’s left of the economy will collapse, but on the other hand increase the spending for hospitals and education (so that only the good slaves will survive).

    Following is my summary of the strategy of IMF and World Bank for Yemen in more detail.
    Increase prices
    raising subsidized prices despite lower world market prices (also for cereals), thereby significantly reducing subsidies, and by cuts in development expenditure (…)
    the intensive civil unrest following the June 1998 increases in administered prices pointed to the need to enhance public awareness of the reform program to ensure that further progress on reforms is not delayed
    ”.

    Increase taxes
    the taxpayer identification number system (TIN) will be extended beyond the current range of major taxpayers to medium- and smaller-sized contributors and will be enforced through penalties for non-observance. In addition, the need for computerization to enhance the effectiveness of the TIN's use will be reviewed”.

    Reduce subsidies
    in January 1999 the government eliminated the wheat subsidy by liberalizing the trading and pricing of wheat--well ahead of the initial target date--and plans to halve the flour subsidy through an increase in price early in 1999. The flour subsidy will be abolished in full by the start of 2001

    More hospitals, pharmaceuticals, and schools
    GDP for 1999-2001 are to be increased to average 8.2 percent for education, 1.6 percent for health, and 1.2 percent for social safety net programs. In addition, reform programs will be implemented in the education and health sectors to ensure better management of scarce public resources (…)
    To support this effort, trade in pharmaceuticals will be delegated to the private sector by eliminating the government procurement monopoly effective by the year 2000
    ”.

    Increase repaying of debts and a strong legal system to protect the banks
    The soundness of the banking system is vulnerable because of weak enforcement of prudential regulations, high levels of nonperforming loans in certain (mostly state-owned) banks, and a weak judiciary system (…)
    government gives immediate priority to introducing the legal, judiciary, and regulatory framework necessary to establish a free market environment for private sector activity and investment (…)
    A new Central Bank Law will soon be approved by the cabinet with the goal to become effective by end-1999. It will give the central bank greater independence and focus its mandate on price stability through changes in the composition of the Board of Directors, allow it to issue its own securities, if needed, for open market operations, limit public sector financing to emergency loans, grant it freedom to define and adopt its own monetary and exchange rate policy, and require greater accountability (…)
    Accordingly, the reform program over 1999-2001 will include specific steps aimed at advancing reintermediation in a competitive market environment and in particular to unblock the loan recovery process. Measures such as requiring that all court decisions be made in writing and published promptly, strengthening enforcement through introduction of a bailiff system, establishment of a quantitative system for monthly monitoring of court operations, and reducing the fee for filing a case in court will be considered. The delinquent borrower notification system implemented in 1997 will be continued
    ”.


    And it’s not only the bombing and blockade that finishes the destruction of Yemen.
    The situation is in turn used as an argument to stop the “humanitarian” aid to Yemen.
    The banks simply block the transfer of money to import food. They don’t even disguise their sick plans!

    In July 2016 importers couldn’t import food to Yemen, because more than $260 million of their credit couldn’t be transferred to foreign bank accounts.
    In turn the traders must ship the money in cash to the food seller (for example by plane) to purchase food: http://www.reuters.com/article/us-ye...-idUSKCN0ZU0F2

    In December 2016 wheat imports to Yemen were simply stopped due to a “crisis” at the Yemen Central Bank. They can’t import because it has “no access to foreign reserves at all”: http://www.reuters.com/article/us-ye...-idUSKBN1450H6
    Do NOT ever read my posts. Google and Yahoo wouldn’t block them without a very good reason: Google-censors-the-world/page3

    The Order of the Garter rules the world: Order of the Garter and the Carolingian dynasty

  19. #166
    activists are calling on President Donald Trump—who claimed that the death of Syria’s “beautiful babies” in a chemical weapons attack led to his decision to unilaterally bomb that country—to take note of the mass starvation threatening the children of Yemen. ... “The U.S. is supplying the Saudis with bombs and assisting them in this devastating military intervention in the internal affairs of Yemen, taking that country to the brink of famine.”
    "Let it not be said that we did nothing." - Dr. Ron Paul. "Stand up for what you believe in, even if you are standing alone." - Sophie Magdalena Scholl
    "War is the health of the State." - Randolph Bourne "Freedom is the answer. ... Now, what's the question?" - Ernie Hancock.

  20. #167
    Where's the Donald to talk about these "Beautiful Babies" in Yemen. Will he now launch missiles against Saudi Arabia?

    "Let it not be said that we did nothing." - Dr. Ron Paul. "Stand up for what you believe in, even if you are standing alone." - Sophie Magdalena Scholl
    "War is the health of the State." - Randolph Bourne "Freedom is the answer. ... Now, what's the question?" - Ernie Hancock.

  21. #168
    "Mr. President, can you give me a 'beautiful baby' speech too, and then stop helping Saudi Arabia bomb and starve my country?"

    "Let it not be said that we did nothing." - Dr. Ron Paul. "Stand up for what you believe in, even if you are standing alone." - Sophie Magdalena Scholl
    "War is the health of the State." - Randolph Bourne "Freedom is the answer. ... Now, what's the question?" - Ernie Hancock.



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  23. #169
    Yemen killers having a pow-wow... Matthis arrives at Saudi Arabia airbase






  24. #170
    Americans will never hear about this on MSM... been going on too long.


    Don't need a weather man to know which way the wind blows

  25. #171
    THE NETHERLANDS
    When reading the information on the starvation of Yemen, I got kind of worried that my home country the Netherlands isn´t involved.
    I didn´t need to worry: our great country is playing a part that makes money for our elite, without getting the blame.
    There is information (from a report from 2015) that arms are sold from or shipped through the Netherlands to countries involved in the war against Yemen.

    The Netherlands is involved in (lots of) exports to the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
    Components and grenades in 2006, 2013, 2014.
    Components of radar- and radar fire control systems in 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2014.
    Components of rocket launchers in 2009.
    Ammunition in 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014.
    Components for guided projectiles in 2012.
    Parts and components for F-16 fighter jets in 2014.
    Armoured cars in 2014.
    Naval equipment for Sea Sparrow Canister in 2014.

    To Saudi Arabia.
    Components of F-15 fighter jet engines in 2007.
    Components of military communication systems in 2007.
    Communication systems in 2008, 2009.
    Communication systems for tanks in 2009 (more orders expected).
    Portable surveillance radars in 2009.
    Components of armoured vehicles in 2010.
    Components for Typhoon and F-15 fighter jets in 2013.
    Armoured Lexus LX570 in 2014.

    To Jordan.
    F-16 fighter jets in 2009.
    Armoured vehicles in 2010.
    M109 Howitzer tanks in 2010.
    Ammunition in 2010, 2013, 2014.
    Armed armoured vehicles in 2013, 2014, 2015.
    Maverick air-ground missiles and supplies for F-16 in 2015.
    DAF trucks and DAF components in 2015.
    More arms planned to be delivered in April 2016.

    To Egypt
    Armoured cars in 2005.
    Guided anti-tank weapons in 2005.
    Components of radar fire control systems in 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015.
    Guided projectiles in 2006.
    Thermal imaging cameras in 2008.
    Components for armoured vehicles in 2009.

    Of course we wouldn’t want to make life too difficult for those wonderful arms dealers, so in most cases the Netherlands doesn’t require transit license requirement; if they originate or have as destination Australia, Japan, New Zealand, Switzerland or any Member State of the European Union or NATO: http://www.oxfamnovib.nl/Redactie/Pd...ber%202015.pdf
    Do NOT ever read my posts. Google and Yahoo wouldn’t block them without a very good reason: Google-censors-the-world/page3

    The Order of the Garter rules the world: Order of the Garter and the Carolingian dynasty

  26. #172
    Yemeni Al-Qaeda Leader: We’re Fighting Alongside US-Backed Forces
    Insists the War in Yemen Is Against the Shi'ite Houthis

    by Jason Ditz, May 02, 2017


    While the Pentagon often presents the war in Yemen as being against al-Qaeda by way of trying to justify ever deeper direct US involvement, al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) leader Qasim al-Rimi was a bit more frank about the situation, noting AQAP forces regularly fight “alongside” the US-backed Sunni forces.

    That’s an often unspoken reality of the Yemen War, of course, as Sunni tribal forces which are often presented as allies to the Saudis, supported by US-coordinated airstrikes, and “militias” loyal to the Saudi-backed government, regularly coordinate wtth AQAP in fighting against the Shi’ite Houthis.

    This is something the Saudis have preferred not to make a public fact, as the war is already sectarian enough in nature without having direct al-Qaeda involvement, but policy was established very early in the war to attack the Shi’ites wherever they could be found, and to look the other way when AQAP ended up taking over territory in the process.

    AQAP doesn’t see it as fighting alongside the US, of course, they see it as fighting with “fellow Muslims” against the Shi’ites,, who they consider heretics. With the Pentagon looking to get more deeply involved in a direct way in the war, however, they may find themselves with some uncomfortable allies.

    http://news.antiwar.com/2017/05/02/y...backed-forces/
    "The Patriarch"

  27. #173

    In Yemen, Shocked to His Bones

    In Yemen, Shocked to His Bones:



    The ruins carpeted the city market, rippling outwards in waves of destruction. Broken beams, collapsed roofs, exploded metal shutters and fossilized merchandise crumbled underfoot.

    In one of the burnt-out shells of the shops where raisins, nuts, fabrics, incense and stone pots were traded for hundreds of years, all that was to be found was a box of coke bottles, a sofa and a child nailing wooden sticks together.

    This is Sa’ada, ground zero of the 20-month Saudi campaign in Yemen, a largely forgotten conflict that has killed more than 10,000, uprooted 3 million and left more than half the country short of food, many on the brink of starvation.

    ~ Gaith Abdul-Ahad in The Guardian, 12/9/16


    Yemen stands as the worst-threatened of four countries where impending famine conditions have been said to comprise the single-worst humanitarian crisis since the founding of the U.N. On May 2nd, 2017, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs published a grim infographic detailing conditions in Yemen where 17 million Yemenis – or around 60 percent of the population – are unable to access food. The U.S. and its allies continue to bomb Yemen.

    Jan Egeland, who heads the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC), says that seven million Yemeni people are on the brink of famine. "I am shocked to my bones," said Egeland, following a five day visit to Yemen. "The world is letting some 7 million men, women and children slowly but surely be engulfed…" Egeland blames this catastrophe on "men with guns and power in regional and international capitals who undermine every effort to avert an entirely preventable famine, as well as the collapse of health and educational services for millions of children." Egeland and the NRC call on all parties to the conflict, including Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Iran, the US and the U.K. to negotiate a cease fire.

    This weekend, the situation stands poised to become dramatically worse with the apparently imminent bombing, by Saudi Arabia, one of the US’ closest allies, of the aid lifeline which is the port of Hodeida.

    Egeland stresses the vital importance of keeping humanitarian aid flowing through Hodeida, a port which stands mere days or hours from destruction. "The Saudi-led, Western-backed military coalition has threatened to attack the port," said Egeland, "which would likely destroy it and cut supplies to millions of hungry civilians." US congress people demanding a stay on destruction of the port have as yet won no concessions from the Saudi or US governments.

    The US Government has as yet sounded no note of particular urgency about ending or suspending the conflict, nor has its close ally in the Saudi dictatorship. Saudi Arabia’s Defense Minister, Prince Mohammed bin Salman recently gave "a positive view of the war in Yemen." (New York Times, May 2, 2017). He believes that Saudi forces could quickly uproot the Houthi rebels, but rather than endanger Saudi troops he says "the coalition is waiting for the rebels to tire out."

    "Time is in our favor," he added.

    Even if Hodeida is spared, reduced import levels of food and fuel from the Saudi-imposed naval blockade puts the price of desperately needed essentials beyond the reach of the poorest. Meanwhile prolonged conflict, dragged out by a regime that feels "time is on its side" and punctuated by deadly airstrikes, has displaced the needy to those areas where food insecurity is the highest.

    Refugees from three North African countries where conflict is also threatening to impose terrible famine have Yemen on their route to escaping the continent, so they have fled conflict and famine only to be trapped in the worst of this dreadful year’s arriving tragedies.

    The UN’s High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, describes the present situation, two years since Saudi airstrikes escalated the conflict:

    "The violent deaths of refugees fleeing yet another war, of fishermen, of families in marketplaces – this is what the conflict in Yemen looks like two years after it began…utterly terrible, with little apparent regard for civilian lives and infrastructure.

    "The fighting in Hodeida has left thousands of civilians trapped – as was the case in Al Mokha in February – and has already compromised badly-needed deliveries of humanitarian assistance. Two years of wanton violence and bloodshed, thousands of deaths and millions of people desperate for their basic rights to food, water, health and security – enough is enough. I urge all parties to the conflict, and those with influence, to work urgently towards a full ceasefire to bring this disastrous conflict to an end, and to facilitate rather than block the delivery of humanitarian assistance."


    Time is on no-one’s side as regards the crisis in Yemen. As nightmare visions of living skeletons with bloated bellies and pleading eyes once more appear on the planet’s TV screens, we in the US will have missed a vital chance to avert a world in which untold millions are to be shocked to their bones.

    ~Kathy Kelly, (Kathy@vcnv.org), co-coordinates Voices for Creative Nonviolence.
    http://original.antiwar.com/kelly/20...-to-his-bones/

  28. #174
    War pigs bump..

    "The Patriarch"

  29. #175
    In an almost unfathomable level of hypocrisy, the Saudi loving, Yemen genocide supporting warmonger Samantha Power hypocritically tweets attempt to criticize Trump for Saudi cooperation and gets blasted:









    "Let it not be said that we did nothing." - Dr. Ron Paul. "Stand up for what you believe in, even if you are standing alone." - Sophie Magdalena Scholl
    "War is the health of the State." - Randolph Bourne "Freedom is the answer. ... Now, what's the question?" - Ernie Hancock.

  30. #176
    Massive amounts of Yemenis are dying because of starvation, but still no food for Yemen, ignored by the mainstream media.
    At least I can sleep at night knowing that Yemeni children did get their vaccines by the wonderful United Nations.
    While Yemen is being starved to death, the UK, USA, Netherlands, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates (all involved in this clear example of genocide) have nice seats on the highly respected UN Human Rights council (OHCHR): http://www.ohchr.org/EN/HRBodies/HRC...ntMembers.aspx

    The UN has written that Yemen must achieve a “transition”:
    In 2013, Yemen enters into the most critical phase of the Transition, marked by a series of overlapped processes to be achieved in just 12 months:

    • implementation of the national dialogue process,
    • development of a new national constitution,
    • setting up of a legal framework for transitional justice,
    • establishment of an independent institution for human rights,
    • completion of the first phase of the electoral cycle and
    • Accomplishment of structural reforms in the security sector.
    The UN describes the problems for Yemen as follows:
    This complex transition, aiming at establishing a new balance of power in Yemen, will take place in a context seriously affected by:
    - insecurity, as a result of continued military clashes amongst the national army, Al Qaeda-affiliated groups and armed tribes in many areas of the country;
    - severe humanitarian crisis, particularly in the South, aggravated by a massive movement of population from the Horn of Africa; and finally
    - an increasing social demand for “peace dividends”
    “Peace dividends” is the demand for a decrease in military spending and increase in money for social programs: http://www.ye.undp.org/content/yemen...e/countryinfo/

    No information at all about the massive famine caused by the blockade and bombing by the coalition led by the UK/US.
    I have archived this page of the UN here: http://archive.is/mfZbX


    Jared Kushner, President Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser, picked up the phone during a meeting with Saudi officials and called the chief executive of Lockheed Martin, Marillyn A. Hewson, over a $110 billion arms deal with Saudi Arabia.
    The Obama administration put a hold on precision-guided munitions for the Saudis, because there were concerns that they would be used to bomb civilians in Yemen. The Trump administration has freed up those weapons for more terror...
    If I understand correctly the hypocritical Obama did this only in the last months of his presidency.

    Lockheed Martin has a long history of bribing government officials, but don’t worry - Donald Trump has assured us that he’s above corruption…
    According to current and former officials this doesn’t raise legal issues: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/18/w...=top-news&_r=2


    On his recent state visit, Donald Trump openly praised the dictatorial regime of Saudi Arabia:
    We are here to offer partnership-based on shared interests and values.
    (…)
    We must be united in pursuing the one goal that transcends every other consideration. If we do not act against this organized terror, then we know what will happen. Terrorism’s devastation of life will continue to spread.
    (…)
    This is a battle, between good and evil.
    Is this the “good” Saudi and British Royals, against the “evil” Yemenis?

    Secretary of state Rex Tillersons, while standing besides Saudi foreign minister Adel al-Jubeir, declared his hope that Iran “restores the rights of Iranians to freedom of speech, to freedom of organization so Iranians can live the life they deserve”: http://www.vanityfair.com/news/2017/...i-arabias-tune

    The government of Iran is really, really horrible. I’ve heard rumours that they have even tried to support the Yemeni “terrorists”…

    On 20 May, when Donald Trump was visiting, King Salman awarded Trump with the highest honour of Saudi Arabia, the Order of Abdulaziz al-Saud medal.



    Donald Trump, while praising Saudi Arabia, has accused NATO-countries for not spending enough on weapons. Guess who will (finally) become a billionaire, when the money pours to the weapon industry?
    Donald accused countries who fall short of the NATO defence spending target as "owing" "massive amounts of money" from past years (to the arms industry?)…
    "This is not fair to the people and taxpayers of the United States, and many of these nations owe massive amounts of money from past years and not paying in those past years": http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-40037776

    In the following video we can see that Donald Trump makes a strong impression at the NATO meeting, including shoving Duško Marković, Prime Minister of Montenegro, aside to get a better spot for the picture.
    Fortunately Marković knows his place. Marković called it “simply a harmless situation”, because “It is natural that the president of the United States is in the front row: http://metro.co.uk/2017/05/25/did-do...e-way-6662990/
    Last edited by Firestarter; 05-29-2017 at 03:29 AM.
    Do NOT ever read my posts. Google and Yahoo wouldn’t block them without a very good reason: Google-censors-the-world/page3

    The Order of the Garter rules the world: Order of the Garter and the Carolingian dynasty



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  32. #177
    Yemen:

    Conflict News‏ @Conflicts · 50 sek.
    YEMEN: WHO says cholera cases pass the 100,000 mark - @AlArabiya_Eng

    Death toll from cholera outbreak in war-torn #Yemen reaches 746. - @AP

  33. #178
    Yemen



    Hussain Albukhaiti
    Cluster bomb injrd Younis fayd badly while playin n #Saada
    #Yemen poisoned by #US #UK bomblets droppd by #Saudi #UAE

    https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DCEkn_DXkAIJdXL.jpg:large
    https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DCEkp8pXcAE6q56.jpg:large
    https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DCEkrC7XoAEAbzK.jpg:large
    https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DCEkswaW0AEQp7v.jpg:large

    Not White Helmet material huh.








    MAGA
    Last edited by goldenequity; 06-12-2017 at 08:44 AM.

  34. #179



    Images of starving Yemeni children projected on to the Saudi embassy in London in protest of Saudi Arabia's 800 days of bombing #Yemen!









    Last edited by goldenequity; 06-14-2017 at 08:10 AM.

  35. #180

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