Yemen street artist chronicles war on battle-scarred walls

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Yemeni street artist Alaa Rubil finishes one of his artworks painted on a wall in the southern port city of Aden. (Saleh Al-Obeidi / AFP)
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Alaa Rubil finishes one of his artworks painted on a wall to portray images of death and despair to shine a light on the horrors and victims of war. (Saleh Al-Obeidi / AFP)
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This picture taken on May 10, 2023, shows one of the murals drawn by Yemeni street artist Alaa Rubil painted on a wall in the southern port city of Aden. (Saleh Al-Obeidi / AFP)
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Street artist Alaa Rubil walks along a street in Aden, site of shell-pocked buildings in his hometown that he used as canvas to paint images of death and despair. (Saleh Al-Obeidi / AFP)
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Alaa Rubil finishes one of his artworks painted on a wall to portray images of death and despair to shine a light on the horrors and victims of war. (Saleh Al-Obeidi / AFP)
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In this picture taken on May 10, 2023, Yemeni street artist Alaa Rubil stands before one of his artworks painted on a wall in the southern port city of Aden. (Saleh Al-Obeidi / AFP)
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Updated 26 May 2023
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Yemen street artist chronicles war on battle-scarred walls

  • The southern port city of Aden, where Yemeni artist Alaa Rubil lives, became the scene of brutal fighting between government and Houthi rebel forces

ADEN: Yemeni artist Alaa Rubil uses the shell-pocked buildings of his hometown as canvas, painting images of death and despair to shine a light on the horrors and victims of war.

Not long after the start of the bloody conflict between Yemen’s internationally recognized government and Houthi rebel forces, the southern port city of Aden, where Rubil lives, became the scene of brutal fighting.
For several months in 2015, artillery rained down on Aden, and Houthi rockets and mortars fired into densely populated areas killed dozens of civilians, Human Rights Watch reported at the time.
Rubil, now 30, has been painting murals since we has a teenager, but found his voice in the aftermath of that round of violence.
“I saw that the government was not aware of the people who were displaced,” he told AFP.
“I wanted to communicate my message to the world by drawing people who lost their homes and families,” he said.
“By using the walls, I could reach the world.”
Today, the rubble-strewn streets of Aden double as a semi-permanent exhibition of Rubil’s work — and a testament to what the city’s inhabitants have lived through.

On the wall of one shop in a particularly hard-hit area, he painted a large outline of a man’s face, but obscured the eyes, nose and mouth with a cupped palm holding up three sticks of dynamite.
Across the street, on the interior wall of a bombed-out apartment building, a piece he calls “Silent Suffering” depicts a skeleton playing a violin as peace signs float around its skull.
In another work, a girl in a red dress sits on the ground with her head resting in her left hand, next to a black crow perched on a missile.
Behind her, the girl’s deceased relatives, rendered in black and white, peer down from an open window.
The image is based on the true story of a girl who lived in the area and lost her family in the fighting, Rubil said.
“She thinks that war is a game. She thinks that her family is returning,” he said. “So she is waiting for them.”
Amr Abu Bakr Saeed, 42, who lives nearby, told AFP the paintings were a dark but necessary tribute to the dead.
“When we pass through this place, we feel pain, we feel the people who were here,” he said.
“These paintings express the tragedies of the people whose homes were destroyed and who were displaced, and prove that war really took place in Yemen.”

A little more than eight years ago, neighboring Saudi Arabia mobilized a coalition to topple the Houthis, who had seized Yemen’s capital, Sanaa, in 2014.
The war has killed hundreds of thousands of people either through combat or knock-on effects such as hunger and disease. Millions remain displaced, their homes and communities destroyed.
A truce that went into effect in April 2022 officially expired in October, but has still significantly reduced fighting across the country, raising hopes for a durable peace.
Riyadh sent a delegation to Sanaa last month to meet with the Houthis, and the kingdom’s ambassador to Yemen, Mohammed Al-Jaber, told AFP this month he believed all parties were “serious” about bringing an end to the war.
Walking through the ramshackle streets of Aden, carrying his paint and brushes in a small basket so he could touch up several pieces, Rubil said he, too, was trying to be optimistic.
“I love the idea that this place could turn from a center of destruction to a center of peace,” he said, adding he hoped art could help the city rebuild.
But he acknowledged that many Aden residents were still waiting to see tangible progress.
“For me, nothing has changed,” said 53-year-old Yasmin Anwar Abdel Shakur, passing by on her way home from work in a government health office.
“We are threatened by buildings falling over on us at any time,” she told AFP, describing how most buildings that were heavily damaged during the war remain unrepaired.
“Many people have died here, their lives are gone,” she said. “No one knows and no one cares.”
 


Senior Hamas figure among 7 killed in Israeli airstrike

Updated 15 sec ago
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Senior Hamas figure among 7 killed in Israeli airstrike

  • Pair of Israeli airstrikes hit Gaza's Deir Al-Balah, killing a Hamas commander
  • Boy, aged 16, among the dead
CAIRO: A senior figure in the armed wing of Hamas was among seven people killed on Thursday in a pair ​of Israeli airstrikes in Deir Al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip, a Hamas source said.
The Israeli military did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the incident. The Hamas source said one of the dead was Mohammed Al-Holy, a local commander in the group’s armed wing in Deir Al-Balah.
Hamas condemned the ‌strikes on ‌the Al-Holy family, in a statement ‌that ⁠did ​not mention ‌Mohammed or his role in the group. It accused Israel of violating the ceasefire deal in place since October, and attempting to reignite the conflict.
Health officials said the six other dead in the incident included a 16-year-old.
Israel and Hamas have traded blame for violations of the ceasefire ⁠and remain far apart from each other on key issues, despite ‌the United States announcing the start ‍of the agreement’s second phase ‍on Wednesday.
More than 400 Palestinians and three Israeli ‍soldiers have been reported killed since the ceasefire took effect in October.
Israel has razed buildings and ordered residents out of more than half of Gaza where its troops remain. Nearly ​all of the territory’s more than 2 million people now live in makeshift homes or damaged buildings ⁠in a sliver of territory where Israeli troops have withdrawn and Hamas has reasserted control.
The United Nations children’s agency said on Tuesday that over 100 children have been killed in Gaza since the ceasefire, including victims of drone and quadcopter attacks.
Israel launched its operations in Gaza in the wake of an attack by Hamas-led fighters in October 2023 which killed 1,200 people, according to Israeli tallies. Israel’s assault has killed 71,000 people, according to ‌health authorities in the strip, and left much of Gaza in ruins.