War, neglect and ignorance endanger Yemen’s historical sites

Tourists visit the Sira Fortress overlooking Yemen's southern port of Aden, on February 24, 2022. (AFP)
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Tourists visit the Sira Fortress overlooking Yemen's southern port of Aden, on February 24, 2022. (AFP)
War, neglect and ignorance endanger Yemen’s historical sites
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A picture shows a view of destruction in the Ministry of tourism building in Yemen's southern city of Aden, on March 2, 2022. (AFP)
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Updated 19 March 2022
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War, neglect and ignorance endanger Yemen’s historical sites

Tourists visit the Sira Fortress overlooking Yemen's southern port of Aden, on February 24, 2022. (AFP)
  • The cisterns of Aden, millennia-old rainwater tanks carved into the rock to replenish the city wells, have also suffered from neglect

ADEN: Yemen’s Sira Fortress withstood attacks by the Portuguese and the Turks, but years of war have left the 11th century citadel in disrepair, defaced by graffiti and littered with rubbish. Overlooking the southern port of Aden, Sira sits atop a rocky mountain island in the historic district of Crater, a strategic position that once made it a base for British colonial forces.
Around its ancient walls, cigarette butts litter the ground and a visitor has scrawled the words “I love you” on one of the towers of the redoubtable fortress.
Many important archaeological sites and tourist landmarks have been damaged and artifacts looted and smuggled abroad.




A picture shows a view of a neglected old building (R) in the southern Yemeni city of Aden, on March 3, 2022. (AFP)

“Neglect and ignorance have created a level of loss that can no longer be reversed,” said Asmahan Al-Alas, secretary-general of the Yemeni Society for History and Archaeology. “The absence of an official vision for Yemen to maintain and preserve its cultural heritage and identity ... has led to a sharp deterioration,” she said.
The cisterns of Aden, millennia-old rainwater tanks carved into the rock to replenish the city wells, have also suffered from neglect.
The Houthi rebels controlled parts of Aden for several months in 2015 before they were pushed out by pro-government forces.
At the time, the Military Museum — established in 1918 as a school and turned into a museum in 1971 — was destroyed in bombing and ultimately looted.




A picture taken on March 2, 2022, shows reconstruction works of the tourist pier in the southern city of Aden which was destroyed in Yemen's conflict. (AFP)

Osman Abdulrahman, deputy director of Aden’s Antiquities Office, said the city’s key sites still suffer “systematic neglect,” in part for a lack of funding.
“Even if we do get a little bit of funding, it’s not enough to cover even a small part of what is needed,” he said. With a tiny budget of only about $200 a month, his office can barely afford stationery, he added.
“I feel depressed and desperate,” said Abdulrahman. “Sometimes I wish I had never studied archeology.”