Kuwait Times

Yemen gravedigge­rs, bulldozer join forces against COVID

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TAEZ, Yemen: Between the mountain ranges of Taez, dozens of fresh graves are being hastily dug in Yemen’s third city to deal with a spike in deaths from COVIDlinke­d complicati­ons. Groups of men, most of them wearing neither masks nor gloves, carry caskets to AlSaeed cemetery and its row upon row of new graves.

At the same time a truck arrives, carrying mournersal­ong with more bodies. People are struggling to bury their dead in the southweste­rn city amid a surge in cases of coronaviru­s that the war-torn country is badly equipped to combat. Besieged for years by Houthi rebels and their snipers, the gravedigge­rs of Taez are under constant threat and cannot work fast enough.

Health measures, such as wearing surgical rubber gloves to bury COVID-19 victims, are not a priority here. “We are receiving nine or 10 bodies a day,” Shaban Qaed, a cemetery official, said.

“We brought in people from the marketplac­e to dig with us but still haven’t been able to keep up with demand for new graves, and we’ve had to hire a bulldozer.” Men in traditiona­l costume gathered around the last freshly-dug graves on Saturday for a funeral procession, with the rumble of a bulldozer at work in the background. In other parts of the cemetery, women in black sat near the graves, reading from the Koran holy book. The United Nations says the number of new COVID-19 infections in the impoverish­ed country has more than doubled in past weeks.

‘Lot of neglect’

The Saudi-supported government-embroiled in a six-year war with the Iran-backed Huthi rebels-has so far recorded more than 4,900 cases, among them close to 1,000 deaths. But with inadequate testing facilities, delays in seeking treatment and difficult access to health centers, the UN says the official numbers fall far short of reality. Yemen’s health care system has been crippled, in what the UN says is the world’s worst humanitari­an crisis. “Why is there no government move to stop the spread of the pandemic?” read one sign held by Taez residents staging a protest at the cemetery. “There’s a lot of neglect and shortcomin­gs on the part of the government, which is not performing its role,” protester Ahmed al-Bukari told AFP.

“There were some measures during the first wave of the virus but still not up to standard,” he said. “For the second wave, which is more severe, authoritie­s in Taez are not living up to their responsibi­lity to protect people.” Yemen received a first shipment of COVID-19 vaccines last week, after its coronaviru­s committee warned of a public health “emergency” and called for a partial curfew. — AFP

 ??  ?? A Yemeni worker helps as an excavator(background) digs graves for COVID-19 victims at a cemetery in Yemen’s third city of Taez amid a surge in cases of coronaviru­s that the war-torn country is badly equipped to combat. — AFP
A Yemeni worker helps as an excavator(background) digs graves for COVID-19 victims at a cemetery in Yemen’s third city of Taez amid a surge in cases of coronaviru­s that the war-torn country is badly equipped to combat. — AFP

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