Yemen holds mass funeral for children killed in Sanaa blast

A funeral was held for the 14 children killed in an explosion in Yemen's capital on Sunday.
2 min read
11 April, 2019
Yemeni children helped carry the coffins of the schoolchildren killed in the blast [AFP/Getty]

A mass funeral was held Wednesday in Yemen for children killed in an explosion near two schools in the war-torn country's capital Sanaa.

The explosion in the rebel-held capital killed 14 children and wounded 16 others on Sunday, the UN said. The cause remains unknown.

Most of the casualties of the blast in the city's Saewan district were girls under the age of nine, according to the UN.

The children were buried under the watchful eye of Houthi rebels, who have been at war with a pro-government alliance led by Saudi Arabia.

Crowds of men spilled into the streets of the capital where coffins draped with Yemeni flags were lined up.

Relatives of the children and schoolboys hoisted the coffins above the crowd and made their way to the cemetery, escorted by a line of ambulances.

"What sin have they committed?" asked Essam al-Abed, a local Houthi official and funeral organiser.

"Their only sin was carrying backpacks and pens to get an education."

The Houthi rebels have accused the Saudi-led military coalition - supported politically and logistically by the US - of killing the children in an air strike. The coalition denied conducting any air raids on the capital on Sunday.

The United Nations and aid groups have called for an investigation into the explosion but have been unable to determine the cause.

The World Health Organization estimates nearly 10,000 Yemenis have been killed since 2015, when Riyadh and its allies, including the UAE and Egypt, intervened to prevent the government's defeat in the face of rebel advances.

Human rights groups say the real death toll is several times higher.

The conflict has pushed millions of Yemenis to the brink of mass starvation, in what the UN has called the world's worst humanitarian crisis.

The coalition has been blacklisted by the UN for the killing of children, while Saudi Arabia and its allies accuse the Houthis of using civilians as human shields in densely populated areas.

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