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(Beirut, November 17, 2015) – Houthi forces in Yemen are using banned antipersonnel landmines, causing multiple new civilian casualties, Human Rights Watch said today, releasing new evidence of their use. The Houthis, also known as Ansar Allah, should cease using these weapons.
Landmines have killed at least 12 people and wounded over 9 in Yemen’s southern and eastern governorates of Abyan, Aden, Marib, Lahj, and Taizz since September 2015, according to Yemeni mine clearance officials, medical professionals, and media reports. Antivehicle mines accounted for 9 of those killed and 5 injured, although whether the mine is antivehicle or antipersonnel is often not detailed in reporting. Human Rights Watch believes that the actual number of mine victims in Yemen since September may be much higher.
“The Houthis are killing and maiming civilians with landmines,” said Steve Goose, arms director at Human Rights Watch. “Antipersonnel landmines are indiscriminate weapons that should not be used under any circumstances. Houthi forces should immediately stop using these horrific weapons and respect Yemen’s obligations under the Mine Ban Treaty.”
- On September 14, 2015, a PPM-2 antipersonnel mine was cleared from under a tree near al-Nasr Camp in Khormaksar next to Aden International Airport. It had apparently been laid to harm people taking shelter in the shade of the tree.
- On October 12, Wa’el Khaled Muhammad al-Ruja`a, 15, lost his left leg when a landmine exploded as he walked with his friends on the coastal road around the perimeter of Aden Airport, a walk they had taken often. He slipped off the road toward the sea and stepped on a mine. His friends were slightly injured.
A mine action official told Human Rights Watch that mines and explosive remnants of war have been cleared from former battle areas surrounding the entrance to Aden governorate, where Houthi forces were stopped in their approach to capture Aden. At the end of September, YEMAC officials said that people cannot drive safely outside of asphalt roads. The official listed more than a dozen major roads that are suspected to be mine-affected areas.
Mine action officials said that their vehicles, protective equipment, and supplies were all looted during the fighting in Aden.
In 2009, Yemen declared the completion of mine clearance in Aden and had returned the formerly mine-affected areas to communities for productive use.
Marib Governorate
Multiple victims have been killed or wounded by landmines in Marib governorate, east of the capital, Sanaa, in the center of the country, since Houthi fighters withdrew in early October.
Multiple victims have been killed or wounded by landmines in Marib governorate, east of the capital, Sanaa, in the center of the country, since Houthi fighters withdrew in early October.
On November 4, Abd al-Aziz al-Shadadi, 36, the health director in Marib, told Human Rights Watch that 48 people have died and 66 have been injured in landmine-related incidents since March, when the Saudi-led coalition began its military campaign in Yemen. He said the mine victims include children and women. Some have been taken abroad for treatment as local medical facilities cannot treat complex landmine injuries. “We are running low on our medical supplies in the hospital and because of the war all the expert doctors who used to help us with landmine injuries left the country,” al-Shadadi said.
Ali al-Tam, a medical professional, told Human Rights Watch in early November that he had treated 12 landmine victims, of whom 6 died at a hospital in Marib. He provided Human Rights Watch with a list of victims treated from the following incidents:
- On October 10, a man was treated for fragmentation wounds to his face from an apparent landmine explosion;
- On October 13, four men from the same family died and another civilian traveling with them was injured when their vehicle hit an antivehicle mine in al-Faw in southwest Marib governorate;
- On October 18, a man was injured by a landmine;
- On October 21, a man was injured by a landmine;
- On October 22, a 26-year-old man was killed in a landmine explosion at his farm; and
- On October 28, a 25-year-old man died and two men ages 18 and 20 were seriously injured when an antivehicle mine destroyed the car they were driving off-road.
Al-Tam said, “Landmines are like a ghost of death, doesn’t matter who laid them,” Adding that the areas of al-Jafina, al-Faw, al-Maneen, Khat al-Saad, al-Blaq, Thabat al-Masariah, al-Mashajaa, al-Thaba al-Hamara, and Kofal are mined.
Al-Tam said that the casualties were all from landmines laid in areas occupied by Houthi fighters until their retreat from Marib in early October. Marib, he said, was not known to have a significant landmine problem prior to 2015.
- In late September, two civilians were killed in Lahj’s Saber neighborhood by an antivehicle mine on the road from Saber to al-Waht near Saber Education College;
- On November 2, two civilians were injured by an antivehicle mine in Khanfer district in Abyan governorate; and
- On November 2, Ziad Faisal al-Naseri and his friend Sharaf Mahfood, both children, were killed by a mine in al-Hotah, the capital of Lahj governorate.
According to a mine official, the mine action teams had cleared a total of 2,564 landmines and explosive remnants of war from Lahj governorate as of September 27.
Taizz Governorate
Houthi fighters left mines as they retreated from the Red Sea coastal passage of the Taizz governorate, news media reported. They retreated as pro-government forces – backed by coalition forces from the UAE and Saudi Arabia – helped armed “local popular committees” opposed to the Houthis in Taizz regain control of areas leading to the Bab al-Mandeb strait, along with Mayoun Island. As of October 19, mine action officials reported the clearance of 228 antipersonnel mines and 930 antivehicle mines from Bab al-Mandeb, and 237 antipersonnel mines and 272 antivehicle mines from Mayoun Island.
Houthi fighters left mines as they retreated from the Red Sea coastal passage of the Taizz governorate, news media reported. They retreated as pro-government forces – backed by coalition forces from the UAE and Saudi Arabia – helped armed “local popular committees” opposed to the Houthis in Taizz regain control of areas leading to the Bab al-Mandeb strait, along with Mayoun Island. As of October 19, mine action officials reported the clearance of 228 antipersonnel mines and 930 antivehicle mines from Bab al-Mandeb, and 237 antipersonnel mines and 272 antivehicle mines from Mayoun Island.
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