Int’l Report: 4,000 Yemenis are Killed Each Year in Land, Water Disputes

Yemeni farmers during the harvest season (EPA)
Yemeni farmers during the harvest season (EPA)
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Int’l Report: 4,000 Yemenis are Killed Each Year in Land, Water Disputes

Yemeni farmers during the harvest season (EPA)
Yemeni farmers during the harvest season (EPA)

An international center has warned that climate change put the population of Yemen at significant risk moving forward, both in their ability to attain needed resources to survive and in the potential for conflict to continue well into the future over increasingly constrained resources.

In its report on the climate and conflict in Yemen, the Center for Civilians in Conflict (CIVIC) noted that 4,000 people are killed yearly in disputes over land and water.

The report stated that scientists have been discussing the threat posed by climate change in Yemen for decades. One of the most water-poor countries in the world, Yemen is at significant risk of running completely dry, leaving its 30 million inhabitants without water.

Water is a complex problem

In 2010, the World Bank published a paper predicting that Yemen’s groundwater reserves would be depleted between 2030 and 2040, a prediction that remains essentially unchanged.

Ten years later, the Century Foundation published a report stating that, even as the war rages on, “Yemen’s environmental crisis is the biggest risk for its future.”

Although water scarcity in Yemen is a complex problem with multiple causes, climate change has and continues to exacerbate the problem while also contributing to the dire food scarcity and famine experienced throughout the country.

In addition to the threat that climate changes pose to Yemenis’ ability to access water and food, they also threaten to exacerbate the conflict and spark future conflicts due to resource competition and migration.

This phenomenon is already evident in Yemen: the impacts of climate change, combined with the harm warring parties in the current armed conflict have inflicted upon the environment and on critical resources, have contributed to resource scarcity and forced migration across the country, according to the report.

Landmines

These impacts have increased protection threats, tensions between communities over resources, and outbreaks of violence and local conflicts.

With no sustainable, long-term solutions in place to mitigate the effects of both climate change and environmental destruction, the population of Yemen faces significant risks moving forward “both in their ability to attain needed resources to survive and in the potential for conflict to continue well into the future over increasingly constrained resources.”

The last eight years of conflict have “compounded the impacts of climate change on land, water, and food” through the deterioration of basic government services, blockades by warring parties, direct attacks upon farmland and water sources, and the placement of landmines across vast swaths of agricultural land as well as near and inside of water sources.

The report says that resource mismanagement has been an issue for many decades in Yemen, starting long before the conflict. However, it has been exacerbated by the conflict.

The breakdown of government institutions due to the lack of salary payments since the start of the war has left many government entities either completely shut down or working with minimal resources. Additionally, there are possibly over two million landmines scattered across the country.

Thousands of deaths annually

The Center discussed the impacts that climate change and the current conflict have had on their access to resources, their livelihoods, and inter- and intra-community relations.

CIVIC found that, combined with the environmental destruction caused by warring parties, climate change is directly correlated to shortages in critical resources, loss of livelihoods, forced migration, and, ultimately, conflict.

Disputes over land and water in Yemen are not a new phenomenon.

The Chief Technical Advisor at the UN Food and Agricultural Organization (UNFAO) in Aden, Walid Saleh, told CIVIC that according to statistics provided by the Ministry of Interior in 2010, “land and water conflict is the second biggest cause of conflict in Yemen… 4,000 people are killed each year in conflicts over land and water.”

The Center asserts that water and land scarcity remain one of the most significant challenges Yemen faces and continue to cause local conflicts across Yemen.

Families fleeing the conflict end up fighting with the host communities over the limited water sources.

Aid workers believe climate change and environmental degradation are having a multiplier effect on conflict drivers and exacerbating protection threats facing civilians, creating a greater risk for ongoing and future conflicts in Yemen.

Threatening the right to life

According to the report, the combined effects of climate change and environmental degradation threaten people in Yemen’s right to life, food, and water, and they are creating civilian protection concerns as conflicts erupt, and individuals are displaced due to the increasing lack of resources.

“It’s a conflict trigger. Even if there’s not a conflict because of climate change, it’s a serious risk for causing future conflict.”

It noted that many living in camps have less access to safe and affordable water and food than their non-displaced counterparts.

The poverty and displacement exacerbated by climate change and environmental degradation have also contributed to child recruitment into armed groups and early marriage, and many children have been forced to drop out of school to support their families.

The Center stated that efforts to end the current conflict and secure sustainable peace are a priority and a necessary first step to ensure the protection of civilians and end the widespread damage caused by the war. It is also required to allocate more resources to rebuilding the country.



Separated for Decades, Assad's Fall Spurs Hope for Families Split by Golan Heights Buffer Zone

Soja Safadi, center, with her sisters, tries to see their other sister, Sawsan, who is inside the buffer zone near the "Alpha Line" that separates the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights from Syria, in the town of Majdal Shams, Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2024. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix)
Soja Safadi, center, with her sisters, tries to see their other sister, Sawsan, who is inside the buffer zone near the "Alpha Line" that separates the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights from Syria, in the town of Majdal Shams, Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2024. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix)
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Separated for Decades, Assad's Fall Spurs Hope for Families Split by Golan Heights Buffer Zone

Soja Safadi, center, with her sisters, tries to see their other sister, Sawsan, who is inside the buffer zone near the "Alpha Line" that separates the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights from Syria, in the town of Majdal Shams, Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2024. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix)
Soja Safadi, center, with her sisters, tries to see their other sister, Sawsan, who is inside the buffer zone near the "Alpha Line" that separates the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights from Syria, in the town of Majdal Shams, Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2024. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix)

The four sisters gathered by the side of the road, craning their necks to peer far beyond the razor wire-reinforced fence snaking across the mountain. One took off her jacket and waved it slowly above her head.
In the distance, a tiny white speck waved frantically from the hillside.
“We can see you!” Soha Safadi exclaimed excitedly on her cellphone. She paused briefly to wipe away tears that had begun to flow. “Can you see us too?”
The tiny speck on the hill was Soha’s sister, Sawsan. Separated by war and occupation, they hadn’t seen each other in person for 22 years, The Associated Press said.
The six Safadi sisters belong to the Druze community, one of the Middle East’s most insular religious minorities. Its population is spread across Syria, Lebanon, Israel and the Golan Heights, a rocky plateau that Israel seized from Syria in 1967 and annexed in 1981. The US is the only country to recognize Israel's control; the rest of the world considers the Golan Heights occupied Syrian territory.
Israel's seizure of the Golan Heights split families apart.
Five of the six Safadi sisters and their parents live in Majdal Shams, a Druze town next to the buffer zone created between the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights and Syria. But the sixth, 49-year-old Sawsan, married a man from Jaramana, a town on the outskirts of the Syrian capital, Damascus, 27 years ago and has lived in Syria ever since. They have land in the buffer zone, where they grow olives and apples and also maintain a small house.
With very few visits allowed to relatives over the years, a nearby hill was dubbed “Shouting Hill,” where families would gather on either side of the fence and use loudspeakers to speak to each other.
The practice declined as the internet made video calls widely accessible, while the Syrian war that began in 2011 made it difficult for those on the Syrian side to reach the buffer zone.
But since the Dec. 8 fall of Syrian President Bashar Assad’s regime, families like the Safadis, are starting to revive the practice. They cling to hope, however faint, that regime change will herald a loosening of restrictions between the Israeli-controlled area and Syria that have kept them from their loved ones for so long.
“It was something a bit different. You see her in person. It feels like you could be there in two minutes by car,” Soha Safadi, 51, said Wednesday after seeing the speck that was her sister on the hill. “This is much better, much better.”
Since Assad’s fall, the sisters have been coming to the fence every day to see Sawsan. They make arrangements by phone for a specific time, and then make a video call while also trying to catch a glimpse of each other across the hill.
“She was very tiny, but I could see her,” Soha Safadi said. “There were a lot of mixed feelings — sadness, joy and hope. And God willing, God willing, soon, soon, we will see her” in person.
After Assad fell, the Israeli military pushed through the buffer zone and into Syria proper. It has captured Mount Hermon, Syria’s tallest mountain, known as Jabal al Sheikh in Arabic, on the slopes of which lies Majdal Shams. The buffer zone is now a hive of military and construction activity, and Sawsan can’t come close to the fence.
While it is far too early to say whether years of hostile relations between the two countries will improve, the changes in Syria have sparked hope for divided families that maybe, just maybe, they might be able to meet again.
“This thing gave us a hope ... that we can see each other. That all the people in the same situation can meet their families,” said another sister, 53-year-old Amira Safadi.
Yet seeing Sawsan across the hill, just a short walk away, is also incredibly painful for the sisters.
They wept as they waved, and cried even more when their sister put their nephew, 24-year-old Karam, on the phone. They have only met him once, during a family reunion in Jordan. He was 2 years old.
“It hurts, it hurts, it hurts in the heart,” Amira Safadi said. “It’s so close and far at the same time. It is like she is here and we cannot reach her, we cannot hug her.”