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Ali Abdullah Salih

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  • Landmines in Yemen

    Death beckons with every step

    The war in Yemen is not over, but at least there is a ceasefire. Meanwhile, the population is suffering from landmines that have made large parts of the country impenetrable. Hundreds of people have already died. Safia Mahdi reports from Sanaa

  • Nora Al-Jarawi (@Noorajrwi) is a Yemeni political and human rights activist.
    Yemen’s other war

    Female politicians targeted on social media

    With more than two hundred thousand followers on Facebook and about 54 thousand followers on Twitter, I am one of the most prominent Yemeni politicians on the ground and online. Yet not a day passes without me having to fight in the virtual world because I decided to have a voice. Activist Nora Al-Jarawi gives a personal account

  • Saudi Arabia’s divided anti-Houthi coalition

    Rescuing the state of Yemen

    United Yemen’s future looks increasingly doubtful. August 2022 saw fierce fighting between members of Saudi Arabia's anti-Houthi coalition forces in the southern Yemen governorate of Shabwa. By Stasa Salacanin

  • Stop and think before you share a piece of news. Ask yourself, why would I want to share this? Also ask yourself, what is the source of the news and why was it published?
    Yemen, Ukraine, the world

    Fighting fake news and disinformation

    Sidq Yemen, an independent online platform, specialises in fact-checking viral Yemeni news stories and countering mis/disinformation. Hannah Porter spoke to its head of communications about fake news in Yemen

  • Yemen's civil war

    Underage "martyrs": child soldiers in Yemen

    In Yemen, families send their children to so-called summer camps. There, adolescents are given combat training and taught why they should fight for God. Both government forces and Houthi rebels use child soldiers. By Ahmed Imran and Emad Hassan

  • Yemen: Insurgency and nightmare

  • Yemen: Insurgency and nightmare

    Ten years ago, in February 2011, Yemenis took to the streets for freedom and the rule of law. But instead, the uprising turned into a war that has lasted for years. Impressions from a torn country. By Kersten Knipp

  • Yemeni people wave a national flag during a celebration commemorating the third anniversary of the 2011 uprising in Sanaa, Yemen, 11 February 2014.
    Arabellion and the advent of Joe Biden

    Yemen 10 years after the Arab Spring – never lose hope

    Yemen's Arab Spring uprisings led to a raging civil war that has inflicted immense suffering on the population for the past seven years. Will the United States' halt on arms sales to Saudi Arabia and a new envoy help bring peace? By Jennifer Holleis

  • Interview with writer Guy Helminger about Yemen

    No ulterior motives, just tea

    Since 2015, war has been raging in Yemen – a country about which people in Europe know astonishingly little. Cologne-based writer Guy Helminger visited Yemen in 2009, six years before hostilities began. He describes his experience in his book "Die Lehmbauten des Lichts" (Clay buildings of light). Interview by Gerrit Wustmann

  • DW in-depth

    German arms feeding the Yemen conflict

    A team of investigative journalists involving the Deutsche Welle have discovered that German weaponry and tech play a far greater role in the Yemen conflict than previously thought. Meanwhile the German government continues to feign ignorance. By Nina Werkhauser and Naomi Conrad

  • Interview with Karl-Otto Zentel, General Secretary of CARE Deutschland

    Yemen – what is the world waiting for?

    With the latest round of peace talks aimed at ending the war in Yemen underway in Sweden, Karl-Otto Zentel, General Secretary of CARE Deutschland, gives his own assessment of the civil war and the chances for peace. Interview by Carsten Gruen

  • Bearing the brunt of the war

    Yemeni families in dire straits

    War, famine and poverty are devastating Yemen. Millions of people are in dire need of food and medical supplies. Among the worst-affected are young mothers and their children. Gouri Sharma and Mohamed Hussein report

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