The Saudi plan to exterminate Yemen's fishermen

Started by Yoshida Keiji, February 20, 2019, 09:41:20 AM

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Yoshida Keiji

https://youtu.be/qkWfZCDHo-c

For the past three-and-a-half years, the Saudi/UAE coalition -- with support from the United States and the United Kingdom -- has relentlessly bombed civilian targets, including schools, hospitals, clinics, water-treatment facilities, and even school buses.
But little attention has been given to the devastating reality fishermen, who have become frequent targets, have to live each day.

And it's no accident.

This is part of the U.S.-Saudi led coalition's long-standing efforts to wage war against Yemen's food supply.

In the first year of the war alone, the coalition bombed over 350 farms, factories, food storage sites, markets, and other agricultural infrastructure, resulting in heavy damage to Yemen's small portion of arable land -- a lifeline for its people.

With neither farmers nor fishermen safe from coalition attacks, famine has become a massive crisis in Yemen, further exacerbated by the coalition's blockade of the country since March 2015 when Saudi Arabia launched its war against Yemen.

This blockade prevented food from being imported into the troubled nation. The gravity of the situation is starkly revealed by recent warnings from the UN, which has cautioned that an estimated 18.4 million Yemenis -- two-thirds of the country's entire population --  now risk starving to death.

However, thanks to the coalition's naval blockade of Yemen, Yemen's fishermen are arguably in an even more precarious situation, as they are targeted by coalition fighter jets and naval vessels alike.

KillTyrant

Conjecture with no real proof. Only B roll and still imagines with no context within them only with the narrator implying that are connected. People fell for micheal moors bullshit documentary due to this exact same style of "documentary".

More proof and evidence is required to make this kind of claim.

trainer

#2
Any violence committed by nation-states is almost always disregarded, unless we're talking about an African, Asian, or Middle Eastern nation-state.