World

Hajjah (Yemen), November 7: Thousands of Yemenis have turned to drive motorbike taxis to make a living after the years-long war had deprived them of jobs, land, and homes.
Amid soaring prices and the ongoing fuel crisis caused by the war, motorbike taxis have attracted Yemeni passengers increasingly in the context of traffic congestion across the Yemeni cities due to low fuel consumption, cheap fare, speed as well as agility maneuvers during peak hours.
In the Yemeni Red Sea city of Midi, displaced Ali Faidi chose to work as a motorbike taxi driver to feed his five children after he lost his home and farm in the prolonged civil war.
"I sold my wife's jewelry and bought a motorbike to feed my family," Faidi told Xinhua.
The 27-year-old father recalled that "I decided to get into this business after we fled the battle that destroyed our homes, shops, and farms in our village in Haradh district four years ago ... we lost everything."
"This work is hard and dangerous, and sometimes I don't earn enough money to buy milk for my little girl," he said while staring at his right hand's index finger which was injured in a traffic accident.
Despite daily accidents reported in local media, motorcyclists across the country do not wear helmets or other safety equipment.
Mohamed Taher, a resident in the city, said he always takes a motorbike taxi to go to the market and return home.
"Taking a car taxi is very expensive and I cannot afford the fare, while the fare for a motorbike is low, even though its accidents are serious and fatal," he added.
Another motorbike taxi driver Abdullah Kadish noted that there isn't much choice in the war.
"There are no jobs available here and no regular humanitarian aids to reach this besieged city, so I have to work all day long or my family will starve," the 55-year-old man told Xinhua.
Midi city and parts of the neighboring districts of Hayran, Abs, and Haradh in the northwestern province of Hajjah are under the governmental force's control, and the Houthi forces control the southern districts of the province.
The civil war flared up in late 2014 when the Iran-backed Houthi militia advanced from its stronghold in the northern province of Saada, seizing control of several northern provinces and forcing the Saudi-backed government of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi out of the capital Sanaa.
The war has since killed tens of thousands of Yemenis, displaced four million, and pushed the country to the brink of starvation.
Source: Xinhua