Just saw this on the CNN headline:
LEFT BEHIND
Stranded Americans fend for themselves in war-torn Yemen
By
, CNN
Updated 1148 GMT (1848 HKT) April 20, 2015
(CNN)"My son served in the army for four years. In Iraq. He served because we love our country. As we should. Now look at us?"
Muna Mansour is gesturing around her at the slatted cargo hold she and her family -- all nine of them -- are trying to get comfortable in. They're squeezed in with two other families. On the ground by my feet, Muna's middle grandchild is sleeping, curled up beside an oil drum.
"There's nowhere to sleep, there's no food -- you can see how people are just thrown around all over the place," she says.
Muna is from Buffalo in upstate New York. Her family is among the dozens of Americans caught in the crossfire of warring parties in Yemen. And although many other countries evacuated their citizens, India most notably ferrying out around 5,000, the United States has said it is too dangerous for them to directly evacuate American nationals.
"I was there when the Indians picked up 200 of their people from the port. It was embarrassing. We were just sitting there waiting for someone to come and say 'OK where are the Americans, let's pick them up,'" she says.
"I called the Riyadh embassy," she adds, referring to the U.S. Embassy in neighboring Saudi Arabia. "I told them there were about 75 families here waiting at the port. My family has been waiting there for two weeks. We ran out of money, we ran out of food."
Muna's grandchild sleeps curled around an oil drum during the journey from Aden to Djbouti.
Desperate to leave
It was purely coincidence that led to Muna being on board this ship, a wooden vessel chartered by CNN to reach the port city of Aden, in Yemen.
Muna was visiting her sick father in Aden when fighting broke out around her. With the Houthi forces to the north and the waters of the Gulf of Aden to the south, the city is essentially besieged. It took us over 30 hours of travel -- and a lull in the fighting -- for us to be able to dock at one of Aden's smaller ports.
Our ship was the first the port had seen in over a week. We agreed to take back 60 refugees -- including 15 Americans -- who had gathered at the port's gate when news of our arrival spread. But of course that's nowhere near enough. So many more are desperate to leave.
I asked Muna what life in Aden was like. "My daughter-in-law would crouch down and hide in the kitchen," she recalls. "It was just bombs all the time. Gunshots. People running down the street."
She trails off into silence.
For everyone here with us on the boat, there are families left behind. Mothers and fathers. Daughters and sons.
Muna Mansour said she and fellow Americans had waited for word on how they've be evacuated from Yemen. It didn't come.
Euphoria over escape
The first night on board and our boat had an almost festive air. Our new passengers were laughing and sharing cigarettes, euphoric at their escape. One woman though was sitting alone on deck and I realized she was crying. She told me her 15-year-old son was trapped on the other side of one of the many front lines that are now etched into the city's streets.
They'd waited for 10 days but neither her son nor her parents could cross over to the port, in Al Tawahi district. Too scared to risk missing the boat and endangering the lives of their other three children, her husband had convinced her to board. When they called to tell her son he also had news for them: He'd joined the fight against the Houthi forces.
For Muna, her ordeal ended at Djibouti Port where Christina Higgins, the U.S. Deputy Chief of Mission, was among the embassy staff waiting to meet them. I asked Higgins about the sense of abandonment Muna and many of the other American's trapped in Yemen said they felt.
"We have one of the branches of Al Qaeda that's especially active. There's the Houthis, neither of these two groups friendly to U.S. citizens. We've had to weigh very, very carefully what is the safest way, the best way for us to help them."
Higgins says ultimately each U.S. citizen is going to have to judge what is best for themselves and their families.
"For many U.S. citizens that's going to mean sheltering in place. For other U.S. citizens we're actively working at getting information to them on different avenues for travel out of Yemen."
Watching them hand out cookies, water and phones to reassure those waiting at home, it's clear the staff here are overjoyed to have their citizens safe and sound. There are many more though of course who are still in danger.
There are no definitive records but the 15 Americans on board our ship said they had counted 75 more families waiting in Aden port, who couldn't afford the fee of $300 per person being charged to depart Aden.
That's 75 more families waiting for another happy coincidence to dock at Aden's deserted ports.
Makes you wonder why Obama isn't evacuating America's own citizen let alone helping out the international community in the process? Right now it seems China is helping to evacuate not just their own citizen by also citizens from other countries!
Why is the world's sole superpower with the largest and most advanced navy sitting on the sideline?
This is more than embarassing for the American establishment.