‘Why I’m aboard the Rescue Ship
to Yemen’
By Caleb T. Maupin
May 13, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
In the Persian Gulf
Caleb Maupin
about to board ship with humanitarian aid bound for Yemen.
May 13, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "WW"
- May 12 — I am a radical journalist and political analyst as well as an
anti-war activist working with the International Action Center, Fight
Imperialism, Stand Together (FIST) and the United National Antiwar Coalition.
I am 27 and grew up in Ohio. I currently live in Brooklyn,
N.Y., with my loving spouse Meches. However, as you read this message, I am
thousands of miles away from home on a ship in the Persian Gulf.
Why am I at sea on the other side of the world? I am part of a
humanitarian mission carried out by the Red Crescent Society of the Islamic
Republic of Iran. We are attempting to bring medical supplies, flour and water
to the people of Yemen.
A criminal U.S.-Saudi war of aggression
In response to a massive uprising demanding democracy and
self-determination in Yemen, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has unleashed an
intensive bombing campaign. Over 1,000 innocent civilians are already dead.
Schools, hospitals, power plants and mosques are being targeted.
As someone from the United States, nothing disturbs me more
than the fact that the cruise missiles and other weapons used to terrorize and
kill innocent Yemenis are provided by my own government. Our government
constantly utilizes propaganda about “human rights” when attempting to isolate
and demonize certain countries, but for more than half a century it has been
coddling the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, one of the most blatant human rights’
violators on the planet.
The Saudi regime not only beheads, tortures and exploits
people within its own borders, but it represses people throughout the region.
The people of Yemen have long been held down by a corrupt,
undemocratic regime backed and supported by Saudi Arabia and the U.S. The
recently deposed President Mansour Hadi ran unopposed in the 2012 election as
the official Saudi-backed and -selected candidate. The U.S./Saudi regime in
Yemen has facilitated a horrific campaign of drone strikes by the U.S. military
since 2002 that has left countless innocent civilians dead.
In response to years of impoverishment, repression and
humiliation, the people of Yemen have risen up in revolution. The Ansarullah
organization, commonly called the “Houthis” in U.S. media, is at the center of a
broad coalition of forces that are writing a new constitution. Popular
committees have sprung up all across the country.
Violence against a massive democratic upsurge
Despite what you have heard on CNN, this is not an ethnic or
religious war. This is not a “proxy war” with Iran. This is a popular,
anti-imperialist struggle for democracy and independence led by the Yemeni
people
themselves. The Ansarullah organization is aligned with
Sunnis, secularists and various forces from across Yemeni society who want to
free their country from foreign hands.
In response to this massive upsurge of people’s power, the
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, along with ISIS and al-Quaida in Yemen, is waging a
campaign of violent terrorism. They hope to drown this popular revolution in
blood, beat down the Yemeni people and force them back under Saudi dominion. The
U.S. government is supporting the Saudi regime and its allies in their criminal
attack, and this is abhorrent and immoral.
A few passing words of criticism and condemnation from U.S.
officials do not change the reality of the ugly U.S. alliance with the Saudi
regime. The U.S. officials who arm and coddle the Saudi regime, as well as the
U.S. and British oil corporations who make billions of dollars from this twisted
relationship, are complicit in the crimes against humanity currently taking
place in Yemen.
The Yemeni people, despite this horrendous bombing campaign,
have not surrendered. The Ansarullah fighters have aligned with the Yemen Army
and the tribal forces in a united front. Saudi Arabia’s attempt to form a “Free
Army” of Yemen mercenaries has completely flopped. It is now reported that more
than 642,000 Yemenis of various religious backgrounds have joined together to
form people’s militias to beat back the Saudi assault.
A humanitarian mission
On board the Rescue Ship with me are other peace activists
from the U.S., Germany and France, as well as many doctors and a few journalists
from Iran. We intend to deliver our cargo of over 2,500 tons of food and medical
supplies to the port of Hodeidah on the Red Sea.
Everything on the ship has been carefully checked to make sure
nothing that could be considered a weapon is on board. This is a mission of
peace, carried out by the Red Crescent Society of the Islamic Republic of Iran,
a nongovernmental organization recognized by the United Nations.
Iranian jets attempted to deliver medical aid on April 28.
They were cleared for landing by Yemeni airports, but before they could touch
down, they were repelled by Saudi fighter jets.
Blocking the delivery of humanitarian aid is an extreme
violation of international law. As our craft propels through the Persian Gulf,
we are loudly urging that no one interfere with this peaceful humanitarian
mission.
Let the hungry children of Yemen live! This illegal, immoral
blockade must end! Don’t block the Rescue Ship!
Copyright © 2015 Workers.org