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  • Soccer in Yemen

    Yemen's young footballers give the country hope

    Little football has been played in war-torn Yemen since 2014. Yet with the ceasefire holding and the Under-17s narrowly missing World Cup qualification, the beautiful game could help bring some joy and unity to a divided country. By John Duerden

  • "Al Murhaqoon" ("The Burdened") is the first Yemeni feature film ever to be shown at the Berlinale.
    Berlinale's first Yemeni feature film

    The taboo of abortion

    "Al Murhaqoon" ("The Burdened") is the first Yemeni feature film ever to be shown at the Berlinale. Ahmed Shawky spoke to director Amr Gamal about the difficulties of making a film in Yemen and the taboo of abortion

  • Symbolic image from 2019: Tensions between Iran and the outside world escalated following a limpet mine attack on four oil tankers on 12 May 2019 near the Strait of Hormuz. A second attack followed – here pictured – on two other tankers in the Gulf of Oman on 13 June 2019. In response, the tankers association "Intertanko" issued a warning of the dangers to the global energy trade.
    Iran and global energy supplies

    Covert conflict in the Gulf

    Since Russia invaded Ukraine, Europe has been trying to find alternatives to Russian gas, inevitably zeroing in on the Arab Gulf states. In his commentary, Yemeni politician Muammar al-Iryani proposes a simple way for the West to secure international shipping routes

  • 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

  • Rasha Abdullah al-Harazi (left) was a passionate photographer, says her friend Asma A., who wishes to remain anonymous for security reasons.
    War in Yemen

    Death to journalists

    Journalists are under fire from all factions in the Yemen conflict. Rasha Abdullah al-Harazi, nine months pregnant, recently died in a car bomb attack in Aden, her husband barely survived. Just one of many, as Diana Hodali reports

  • 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

  • Omitted from the United Nations' list of shame

    Yemen's dead and injured children haunt Saudi-led war

    Just one day after the UN Secretariat omitted Saudi-led forces from a "list of shame", an airstrike killed four children. The UN is under pressure to acknowledge Saudi Arabia's role in killing and maiming children. By Lewis Sanders IV and Kerstin Knipp

  • COVID-19 pandemic

    Coronavirus pushes Yemen to the brink

    War, poverty, cholera – and now coronavirus has taken hold in Yemen. The country could collapse, aid organisations fear. A Yemeni journalist talks about the situation in her country. By Diana Hodali

  • 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 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Tawakkul Karman

    "We need to bring back the Arab Spring!"

    In 2011 Tawakkul Karman became the first Arab woman to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. In interview with Nader Alsarras, the 39-year-old explains why the Arab Spring failed and why Yemen has since descended into war and chaos

  • Interview with Hooria Mashhour

    On the rebels′ blacklist

    Fearing for her life in her home country, a former minister from Yemen applied to Germany for asylum. Now she′s working for the integration of refugees. Interview by Ali Almakhlafi

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