News
Mines and explosives continue to cause casualties. Where the population faces various threats, including improvised explosive devices, landmines and sea mines, as hardly a day passes without the Houthi militia committing a disaster against the Yemeni people.
Since its attempt to control Yemen, this group has committed the most horrific human crimes against civilians, and mine-laying is the most important of them.
The minefields left by the Houthi group constitute a nightmare that haunts the population, especially since this scourge has caused more casualties than clashes.
Death cans have written tragic stories that time will not be able to erase their impact, as different regions are still witnessing incidents of mine explosions that tore apart the bodies of innocent people and turned them into scattered pieces, leaving behind suffering that will continue to be lived by victims families for long periods that the fluctuations of time will not be able to erase.
Houthi mines have turned large areas of citizens farms into death fields that claim innocent lives. It also prevented farmers from reclaiming their lands, harvesting their fruits, or returning to the areas from which they were displaced.
Landmines have prevented fishermen from reaching coastal areas for fishing, particularly in Al Hudaydah, where mines fill coastal roads and spread fear.
The Houthis also planted marine mines on the Yemeni coasts, which represents a threat to international shipping in addition to the danger they pose to fishermen. Mine planting has made fishing and rural communities poorer in Yemen.
The day of Nakba, as the Yemenis called it, was a milestone in the modern history of Yemen, as it pushed this country into a dark corridor whose exit has yet to come. That is why we see the people of Yemen wandering in this darkness without guidance.
The data paint a picture of the situation in Yemen, as about eight out of ten Yemenis are in need of humanitarian assistance or protection, in addition to that 14.4 million of the country’s 30.5 million people suffer acute needs and 3.5 million are displaced, while Another 20 million people are food insecure, nearly half of whom are extremely hungry.
In addition, 18 million Yemenis lack access to safe drinking water and sanitation, and nearly 20 million Yemenis do not have adequate health care. Mines played a pivotal role in aggravating the situation and making it worse.
However, despite this complex situation and the dangers that accompany the workers steps, Project Masam continues its work steadily and steadfastly in order to save human lives and free the earth from the shackles that suffocate it so that it can breathe freely, so the engineering teams are making strenuous efforts to remove and dismantle the fields and networks of mines and explosives planted The Houthi hands of evil in a number of liberated areas, towns and villages.
However, what makes it difficult is the lack of maps to guide the locations of these killer boxes.
But despite this, Project Masam, until the eighth of November, cleared 196,591 mines, unexploded ammunition and explosive devices, and cleansed 15,995,121 square meters of Yemeni territory.
Team 11 Masam also managed to destroy and detonate 3,450 mines, explosive devices and unexploded ordnance in Al-Jufina area in the Ma’arib governorate, bringing the total number of destruction operations carried out by the project in Ma’arib governorate to 22.
The coup militias have continued to humiliate Yemeni society. They did not leave a pain door but knocked on, hoping to enjoy the pain of innocent.
Their sick criminal thought and passion for bloodshed guided them to booby-trapping lands so that all paths lead to death.