Yemen strikes kill MSF ambulance driver, five others

23 Jan, 2016

Air strikes by Saudi-led warplanes on northern Yemen have killed six people, including an ambulance driver working for Doctors Without Borders (MSF), and wounded 40 others, the relief agency said Friday. The strikes hit the villages of Dhahyan, Baqim and Jawf on Thursday afternoon in northern Yemen's Saada province, said MSF spokeswoman Malak Shaher.
The area is a stronghold of Iran-backed Shia Huthi rebels. The ambulance driver, who worked for MSF and the Jamhouri public hospital in Saada, was hit as he arrived at the Dhahyan bombing site, said MSF. "The ambulance was hit as it arrived at the site of an earlier bombing. When people gathered to assist the victims, the same site was hit again. The driver and the ambulance were then hit in a third strike," it said in a statement. MSF said the total number of wounded and killed was still uncertain, but that it had received 40 casualties, six of whom had died.
"This latest loss of a colleague is devastating, and it demonstrates the ruthlessness with which healthcare is coming under attack in Yemen," said Teresa Sancristoval, emergency co-ordinator at MSF. "People there are being subjected to this kind of violence on a daily basis. No one, not even healthcare workers, are being spared," she said in the statement.

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