Yemen: Forty-nine wounded and two dead after four days of heavy fighting in Taiz city

25 Mar 2019

25 March 2019 – Four days of intense fighting in the Yemeni city of Taiz has left people unable to access healthcare, with at least one public hospital forced to close. The international humanitarian medical organisation Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) warns that urban warfare in densely populated areas is having devastating consequences for civilians and is preventing war wounded from accessing life-saving care in Taiz city.

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 Mawza is located in Taiz governorate Yemen, a 45 minutes-drive to the east of Mocha city. This is a very poor and rural area, people are depending on their land to eat and to earn money. © Agnes Varraine-Leca / MSF

“We are worried that wounded people are trapped between frontlines, and many of them are not able to reach health facilities inside or outside of the city,” said Caroline Ducarme, MSF Head of Mission in Yemen. 

“Across three MSF-supported facilities within Taiz city, medical teams have received 49 war wounded and two dead upon arrival over the last four days. However, we do not know the true total number of wounded in need of emergency assistance.” 

There have been reports of a hospital being damaged due to fighting nearby. Additionally, one of the public hospitals in Taiz has been forced to close due to fighting, making it even harder for people to access urgent medical care.

“There is a continued need for increased protection of health facilities” 

In one MSF-supported public hospital, medical teams reported that a severely wounded patient was forcibly taken out of the operating theatre and prevented from receiving much needed medical care. This is simply unacceptable. 

“There is a continued need for increased protection of health facilities,” said Ducarme. 

“Patients tell us that they can’t access hospitals due to clashes and roadblocks, and there is a fear that hospitals may be attacked. As a result of this fear, people are taking their relatives out of hospitals. Some medical staff have left their jobs as they are so afraid for their safety.”

On the first day of the fighting, the MSF trauma centre, on the other side of the frontline, in Taiz Houban received a two year old boy with a shrapnel injury to his face after a shell landed close to his house in the old city. The family had to drive for almost three hours, crossing frontlines under gun fire to reach the facility. 

Once again, MSF calls on all warring parties to put stronger measures in place to ensure protection for civilians; to facilitate access to medical facilities for all the sick and wounded; to allow humanitarian and medical supplies into all areas; and to protect medical staff and health facilities.