Yemen: Medical supplies reach hospitals in besieged Taiz

 

MSF team in front of MSF emergency room that was opened in February 2016.  Photo: Malak Shaher

19 January 2016, Taiz/Amsterdam – After five months of intense negotiations with officials , international medical organisation Doctors Without Borders (MSF) was able on Saturday January 16, to get a delivery of two trucks full of essential medical supplies into the besieged area of the city of Taiz, in southern Yemen.

Checkpoints and intense fighting have hampered humanitarian aid from reaching the besieged enclave since August, which was the last time that hospitals in the area received medical supplies in any quantity. Severe shortages meant that wound care and surgery had to be stopped on a number of occasions.

“We're very pleased that we managed to deliver the medical supplies to the hospitals in this besieged area, which are seeing large number of patients with war wounds,” says Karline Kleijer, MSF’s emergency manager for Yemen “These essential medical supplies – including chest tubes, anesthetic drugs, fluid, sutures and antibiotics – will support lifesaving surgeries in the hospitals.” Karline added.

Three airstrikes targeted a park in Taiz city’s Al Houban district, 2 km from MSF’s clinic. Photo:MSF

Yemenis living in this densely populated besieged area say that food, drinking water and fuel are increasingly hard to get hold of, and prices of essentials have risen dramatically.
“A large part of the population of Taiz is displaced within the city,” says Kleijer. “They are battling for their survival on a daily basis, and fighting to get hold of sufficient food and water, due to the steep cost of basic necessities and the prevailing insecurity.”

An MSF team has been working in Taiz since May 2015, providing medical assistance to victims of the ongoing fighting, regardless of their political affiliations. “In Taiz alone we have treated more than 5,307 war-wounded people,” says Kleijer. “However, for the last few months, access to this specific enclave of the city with medical supplies has been impossible.”

 

Airstrikes hit Taiz city on a daily basis, and residents live in fear of snipers, stray bullets and mortar shelling, which are being used indiscriminately by both warring groups. The wounded struggle to reach clinics and hospitals, due to the fighting and the difficulties of crossing frontlines and the lack of transport due to fuel shortages. Taiz formerly had 20 hospitals for its population of 600,000; now only six are functioning, and these only partially. Basic healthcare is mainly being provided by medical staff in people’s homes.

Moreover, medical facilities in Taiz and the rest of the country are either been targeted or hit by airstrikes or ground shelling. Most recently, Al Shiara hospital, supported by MSF in Razeh, north of Yemen was hit by a missile on 10 January, killing six people and wounding eight.

“During war, people have a right to medical care, blocking people from health care should never be used as a military tool. It is good news for the people living in the besieged area that these essential supplies were able to enter.” Karline says. “We ask all parties to the conflict to reduce the suffering of the people in Yemen and continue to allow for medical supplies and essentials such as food and fuel to enter all severely affected areas in the country.” 

MSF is an international medical humanitarian neutral organization that was established in 1971. Today, MSF works in more than 70 countries in the world including Yemen. In Yemen, MSF is still working in Sa’ada, Aden, Sana’a, Al-Dhale’, Amran, Taiz, Hajja and Ibb governorates. Since the beginning of 2015, MSF teams in Yemen received more than 88,000 patients in the emergency rooms, treated 20,539 war wounded, performed more than 11,000 surgical interventions, more than 5,000 deliveries and admitting more than 10,000 adult patients and children in the inpatient departments.

Find out more about MSF's activities in Yemen.