Heavy rains, flash floods hit Yemen’s Aden, Lahj, Abyan

1 / 2
People look at the rising water level of floodwater during heavy rains in the old quarter of Sanaa, Yemen April 20, 2020. (REUTERS)
2 / 2
A Yemeni man looks at his damaged tent due to torrential rain and flooding in a makeshift camp for the displaced in the northern Hajjah province on April 19. (AFP/File Photo)
Short Url
Updated 22 April 2020
Follow

Heavy rains, flash floods hit Yemen’s Aden, Lahj, Abyan

  • Country is also facing the threat of coronavirus spreading

AL-MUKALLA: Heavy rains and flash floods struck Yemen’s port city of Aden and neighboring provinces on Tuesday, killing one person as the country also fights the spread of the coronavirus.
Residents and government officials said that a heavy downpour from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. triggered flash floods that overwhelmed the streets of Aden, Abyan and Lahj provinces.
Officials said that an elderly woman died when her house collapsed in Aden due to the rains. “Aden is floating on the floods. The government is assessing the damage and will provide all necessary help,” a government official told Arab News by telephone on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to reporters.
Amateur videos posted on social media showed floods washing away several cars as residents rescued trapped people and protected their houses. State TV said that three children were critically injured when floodwater swept them away on the streets of Aden.
The children were rescued later by residents and were taken to local hospitals. The official state agency said that Yemen’s President Abed Rabbo Hadi called local government officials in Aden and ordered them to arrange urgent help for people affected by the floods.
In Aden, residents demanded that the government remove mud from the streets and offer assistance to the trapped families and those who lost their properties. “We have not seen any assistance yet. The rains caused great damage,” Ahmad, a resident, told Arab News by telephone when rains subsided in the afternoon.

SPEEDREAD

• Amateur videos posted on social media showed floods washing away several cars as residents rescued trapped people and protected their houses. State TV said that three children were critically injured when floodwater swept them away on the streets of Aden.

• President Abed Rabbo Hadi called local government officials in Aden and ordered them to arrange urgent help for people affected by the floods.

In the neighboring Lahj and Abyan provinces, similar torrential rains triggered flash floods that swept over valleys, with no information about human casualties. Earlier this week, government officials in the central province of Marib said that heavy rains in the province killed seven people, including five children, and affected more than 6,000 families. Heavy rains and floods have lashed the Yemeni capital since last week, causing damages to houses and farms.
With each wave of rainstorms, health officials have reported an increase in the number of dengue fever cases that are currently overwhelming Yemen hospitals. Earlier this month, health officials told Arab News that recent flash floods across Yemen led to a new wave of dengue fever that had killed as many as 59 people and infected more than 7,400 others since January as Yemeni hospitals brace for a potential outbreak of the coronavirus. Yemen recorded its first case of coronavirus on April 10 in the southeastern province of Hadramout.
Fighting rages on the battlefields despite calls for a truce to allow health workers to fight the coronavirus. Official media said on Monday that government forces pushed back a Houthi attack on Al-Jadafer region, north of the Hazem town in the northern province of Jawf.


Deal with Iran ‘Unimaginable,’ Pompeo tells WGS in Dubai

Updated 4 sec ago
Follow

Deal with Iran ‘Unimaginable,’ Pompeo tells WGS in Dubai

  • UAE’s Gargash says he would like to see direct US negotiations with Tehran

DUBAI: Former US secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, told the World Government Summit in Dubai on Monday that he believed a deal between Iran and the United States was “unimaginable” under the current Ayatollah regime believing US strikes on the nation were still a possibility despite the apparent deescalation of the last few days.

“It's unimaginable that there could be a deal. To me, we've had a deal with Iranians multiple times,” he told a panel in Dubai on Tuesday.

“They have cheated and lied and avoided compliance with every deal they've signed.”

Pompeo was central to the US decision to leave the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) nuclear deal when he served as secretary during Donald Trumps first term. According to the US department of Justice, the Islamic Republic subsequently placed a $1 million bounty on his head.

Trump has in previous days said the US was seeking to srike a deal with Iran whilst simultanously ordering a large scale militray build up in the region. Pompeo said that he believed the US president could use military strikes – or at least the threat of them – to increase leverage on the regime to give up its enrichment and missiles fully, although he remained cynical of anything being achieved without regime change. 

“To think that there's a long-term solution that actually provides stability and peace to this region while the Ayatollah was still in power, is something I pray for, but find unimaginable,” Pompeo said.

On Syria, Pompeo expressed cautious optimism that the interim president Ahmed Hussein al-Sharaa will succeed in rebuilding his country with a lasting peace.

Al-Sharaa has previously said he was focused on consolidating power, rebuilding state institutions, integrating military factions, and restoring Syria's international relations, including with the United States, Russia, and regional powers.

Pompeo said he maintained a level of mistrust in the Syrian president – most notably due to his involvement with Al-Qaeda - but added that he hoped Al-Sharaa would do well.

 “I have known of Mr. Sharaa for a long time, when I was a CIA director… we had a $10m bounty on his head. He was an Al Qaeda terrorist,” he said.

“It is important for the region to get stability in Syria and so I am rooting for him…. I hope we all do our part to help him be more successful at bringing a very fractured nation back together so that.”

He said he hoped the up to seven million people who had fled the country as refugees could one day return to their homes.

“But it is a very difficult task for anyone and someone with the history that he has, I think it makes it even more complicated for him to be successful. But he’s the leader today and we all should hope that he is able to pull off what It is he has stated his intentions are.”

Pompeo was joined on stage by former UAE Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Anwar Gargash, who was more hopeful of a diplomatic solution to the Iranian crisis; saying the region stood firm against escalation and further prolonged military conflict.

Gargash believed that it was in the best interest of Iran to strike a deal with the US that would open the pathway to it resolving its multitude of crises.

“I think that the region has gone through various various calamitous confrontations. I don't think we need another one,” he told the summit.

“I would like to see direct Iranian American negotiations leading to understandings so that we don't have these issues every other day.”

Speaking more broadly on regional security, Gargash said resolving the Palestinian issue was still of utmost importance if the middle east was to secure a prosperous future. He said that the UAE was commiitted to seeing through the Trumps plan but ruled out rumours that the emirates was poised to take over governance of the territory.

“We have to work with the Palestinians. We have to work with the Egyptians, the Israelis, the Jordanians, and of course, American leadership is key, really, for achieving a sort of, I won't say, sustainable solution at this time, but moving on with with the part two of President Trump's plan,” he said.

On the international stage, Gargash said he bvelived the health of the China-US relationship was the biggest hinderence to peace – warning that if not managed properly it would likely lead to increasing comflict around the world. He said it was paramount that the two countries maintained a mature relationship based on competition.