Aden -

Many sorrows overwhelmed the displaced Yemeni woman, Iftikhan Al-Wasabi, after she remembered with great sadness her husband who passed away months after her displacement from the Jabal Al-Faras neighborhood, which is full of grief and stories of pain and deprivation, in Crater district in Aden, southern Yemen.

Al-Wasabi, who is more than fourteen years old, fled from the Houthi artillery in the city of Taiz to the city of Aden, which is under the control of the Transitional Council, only to find another hell awaiting her there, no less painful than the one from which she fled from her city, which is still grinding into its homes.

IDPs from the marginalized category in Aden camps live an indescribably difficult life (Al-Jazeera)

Since her arrival in Aden, she has settled with her family of 5 members at the foot of a mountain called "Jabal al-Faras" in Crater, and she was among 200 displaced families, most of whom are marginalized people who were subjected to "violence, burning of their homes and forced displacement by the forces of the Southern Transitional Council supported by the Emirates," she told Al Jazeera Net.

The camps scattered on the outskirts of the city of Aden lack the most basic necessities of life (Al-Jazeera)

harsh reality

She says in tones of sadness to Al Jazeera Net, "Our lives turned into hell. Armed men from the security belt came and attacked us, drew weapons in our faces, and took us out of the mountain."

After two years of displacement, this displaced woman seems confused and does not know what to do to feed her children. After she lost her husband, who died of a terminal illness, and before that supported her with a living that covered her and her children, she comes one day and disappears for days, she is now destitute and lacks the simplest things that keep her family on Alive.

Al-Wasabi family is currently sharing living with her brother in a small house that lacks water and electricity (Al-Jazeera)

Al-Wasabi family currently shares living with its brother in a small house that lacks water and electricity, after she and her children spent days lying on the ground. with a sample of them.

One of them is the displaced Salman Saleh Musayyib, 36, who is one of the poorest marginalized groups, who reported that he is currently living in very difficult humanitarian conditions in the city of Al-Khoukha in Al-Hodeidah governorate with his wife and two children after the militants in that area forced him to flee from Aden.

The displaced live in very difficult humanitarian conditions (Al-Jazeera)

methods of abuse

Musayyib told Al-Jazeera Net, "Soldiers from the transitional stormed the mountain. They asked me where you are from. I told them that I was from the city of Zabid in Hodeidah, so they threatened me and asked me to leave the land of the south."

He added, "The world has narrowed us down. We are poor. We could not find anything to eat, but no one cares about us or helps us because we are from the marginalized category."

Like Musayyib, Wadah Qaid remembers with great pain the abuse they were subjected to before the displacement, as they forced him, among others, to carry (concrete) bricks and stand on one leg for a long time. His head was covered in blood.

The Jabal Al-Faras neighborhood in Aden includes houses made of cardboard and wood, and others built of stones (Al-Jazeera)

A human rights report by the American Center for Justice monitored and documented many violations committed by the forces of the Transitional Council, and the report said, "The residents of Jabal al-Faras in Crater were subjected on October 12 to many violations, ranging from arrests, raids, destruction and burning of homes and forced displacement."

According to the report issued early last month, entitled "They Became Homeless," the center's team documented "12 cases of burning, destruction and total demolition of homes, and the displacement of 20 families from their homes at gunpoint, and they are displaced families from several governorates, who were displaced for the second or third time."

Many of the marginalized people from the governorates of Taiz and Hodeidah were displaced from their residential communities after burning their homes (Al-Jazeera)

regional reasons

These facts began on October 2, when armed clashes took place between two armed factions of the Transitional Council, the first led by the former commander of Camp 20, "Imam al-Nubi", and the second led by the "security belt commander", after which the mountain was stormed and its residents were displaced under the pretext of complicity. With the Nubian forces, and allowing them to station themselves in the mountainous region and fortified their homes.

This is not the first incident of its kind. Late last year, more than 130 displaced families of marginalized people from the governorates of Taiz and Hodeidah were displaced from their residential communities, after their homes were burned by the Security Belt Forces of the Southern Transitional Council in Al-Dhalea Governorate, southern Yemen.

The human suffering seems more tragic for the families of the marginalized and their children, whose suffering has multiplied dozens of times (Al-Jazeera)

The head of the National Union of the Marginalized in Yemen, Noman Al-Hudhaifi, said that the forced displacement of many marginalized families in Aden and Al-Dhalea, for apparently regional rather than security reasons, "is part of the many tragedies and long suffering that affected the marginalized category of all parties to the conflict in Yemen."

He added, "Although all segments of Yemeni society suffered from this war, the human suffering seems more tragic for the families of the marginalized, whose suffering has multiplied dozens of times than others and caused the displacement and displacement of many of them fleeing the severity of the conflicts in most regions of Yemen."