Yemen's Media Blackout- the Language of War

By Catherine Shakdam

Since the Saudi-led coalition declared war on impoverished Yemen: March 26, 2015, foreign journalists and independent news organizations have been prevented from entering the country – de facto putting Yemen under a media blackout.

If such infringements on freedom of the press are indeed criminal as they speak of a grand political cover-up, Yemen’s media blackout has reached too grand proportion, and compounded to such an abysmal betrayal of journalistic standards that silence must absolutely be broken.

The danger here is not so much in this silence Saudi regime’s war coalition architected around Yemen, so that only its voice would reach the ears of public opinion, but that our well-thinking, well-to-do so called free press was hijacked to the agenda of a minority few to purposely mislead.

Yemen’s media blackout has many layers … each of which screaming of an exercise in propaganda, misinformation, and more to the point manipulation. Yemen is merely a symptom of our media apparatus’ malady.

One bolder may even elude to folly as without a free press we might as well surrender free thinking to fascism.

Free press those days has become yet another euphemism for political indoctrination.

If we can agree that absolute impartiality is indeed impossible since our prejudices and filters very much make us who we are as individuals, a line should be drawn at organized media dishonesty and in the case of journalism: make-belief.

The under-lining issue surrounding Yemen’s media blackout is not necessarily access but rather the vacuum such lack of access has allowed.

If Yemen needs of course to be open to the scrutiny of the press and by extension the public, mainstream ought to serve as an information medium and not as it is currently doing, turn itself into an asymmetrical of war.

For three years Yemen has suffered one of the fiercest and most vengeful military campaigns ever unleashed against a sovereign nation since WW2.

Only five months into the war (back in August 2015) the head of the Red Cross confirmed that Yemen’s conflict had “wrought destruction similar to that seen in Syria after five years.”

Returning from a visit to the war-ravaged nation, Peter Maurer told the Associated Press that entrenched poverty, months of intensified warfare and limits on imports because of an international embargo have contributed to “catastrophic” conditions.

“The images I have from Sanaa and Aden remind of what I have seen in Syria,” said Maurer. “So Yemen after five months looks like Syria after five years.” That was three years ago.

Since, Riyadh’s invasion and carnage against Yemen have reached dizzying heights … such in fact that the kingdom has deliberately, and systematically targets unarmed civilians to spend Yemenis’ will to resist and thus dismantle from within political opposition.

A survey conducted by the Yemen Data Project revealed in September 2016 that over a third of the Saudi-led air raids on Yemen have hit civilian sites, such as school buildings, hospitals, markets, mosques and economic infrastructure.

The independent and non-partisan survey, based on open-source data, including research on the ground, records more than 8,600 air attacks between March 2015, when the Saudi-led invasion began, and the end of August 2016.

Of these, 3,577 were listed as having hit military sites and 3,158 struck non-military sites.

Yemen is not at war with itself as mainstream claims. Yemen’s war came by way of a foreign invasion.

Yemen’s war has been manned by foreign hands from Saudi tribal regime’s seat of power: Riyadh.

More than any other war in our modern history, Yemen’s war has been labelled under grave misapprehension – decontextualized and politically vulgarized.

Yemen was invaded and therefore was within its sovereign rights to defend itself.

“An act of war is an action by one country against another with an intention to provoke a war or an action that occurs during a declared war or armed conflict between military forces of any origin.”

Yemen is being torn apart, its borders have been breached, its skies darkened, its land set ablaze, its people wrecked by pestilence and famine while the so-called mainstream media has systematically deflected blame, mudding the waters so that the public would not demand accountability for the many lives lost.

“Millions of lives are at risk in Yemen because food, fuel and medical supplies are being deliberately delayed on entry to the war-torn country by the Saudi-led coalition,” Amnesty International warned in a report released in late June 2018.

The 22-page report, Stranglehold, shows how the Saudi-led coalition has imposed excessive restrictions on the entry of essential goods and aid – de facto holding an entire people hostage so that victory: political and military, could be claimed.

War today has its own language and it reads like deceit.

Under its ink, a person’s life – the value put on someone’s right to live free from harm and oppression has become contingent to geography, political beliefs, and religious affiliations.

Yemen happens to sit beyond this invisible line where one’s fate matters, and one’s right to think independently is admissible in a court of public opinion.

For well over a year Yemen’s death toll appears to have been frozen in time.

Before the ravages of cholera, famine, hysteric bombing, raids, and other crazy acts we have been told that Yemen’s death count lies below the 20,000 mark … some media went as far as to claim 10,000 in their efforts to downplay genocide.

This is how Bloomberg put it back in February (2018): “The death toll from fighting so far is estimated at about 10,000, relatively low compared to the 470,000 thought to have died in the seven years of civil war in Syria. Yet life in Yemen has become wretched and perilous, on a mass scale.”

While we admit that getting information from Yemen is more than just challenging … the onus being on Saudi regime for making access almost impossible, war mathematics have revealed frightening numbers.

In November 2017, Save the Children reported that 130 children were dying every day, with 50,000 children already believed to have died in 2017.

In December 2016, UNICEF reported that a child dies every 10 minutes from preventable diseases such as diarrhea, malnutrition and respiratory tract infections.

And the UK-based NGO, Disasters and Emergencies Committee’s recent report put the number of deaths from preventable causes at 10,000. As for Yemen’s cholera epidemic – a direct result of Saudi regime’s aggression on Yemen WHO attested that by July 2017 at least 2,177 deaths had been registered.

To famine … Famine is now threatening over half of Yemen’s total population, throwing millions more into food insecurity.

In January 2017 The UN security chief said millions would die as a direct manmade result of the war. So much for 10, 000 or even 20,000.

If those numbers are in themselves harrowing, they do not offer a real reflection of reality – quite simply because reality is being kept from us for a lack of access and fair reporting.

The real number of the victims of the Saudi invasion and genocidal war should be several times more that the reported figures.

Source: Pars Today, Edited by Website Team