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02:51
Yemen: Yemeni city of Aden grapples with deepening humanitarian crisis
Shotlist Aden, Yemen - Recent (CGTN - No access Chinese mainland) 1. Aerial shots of cityscape 2. Various of traffic 3. People shopping, vendors at stalls 4. Various of people in hospital, doctors seeing patients, patients receiving treatment 5. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Ensaf Al-Khamri, director, Health Office of Al-Mualla District, Aden (starting with shot 4): "The biggest crisis facing patients is the lack of medicines and medical supplies. We try, as much as possible, to provide whatever we can, such as certain tests, but they are still not free. Many patients come to us unable to afford treatment due to the absence of salaries, and most of them request exemptions from payment. But how many people can we exempt, when there are simply not enough medical supplies available?" ++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++ 6. People waiting to see doctor, woman holding child in arm ++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++ Aden, Yemen - Jan 7, 2026 (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland) 7. Various of traffic 8. Vendor, customers Aden, Yemen - Recent (CGTN - No access Chinese mainland) 9. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Ashraf Mohammed, local resident (starting with shot 8): "Living conditions in Aden are very difficult. People have no gas, no electricity, and no access to proper medical services. We are suffering in the south, and many young people are unemployed." 10. Various of gas stations, vehicles, fuel pumps 11. Various of gas cylinders, people waiting 12. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Saeed Khaled, local resident (starting with shot 11): "The gas crisis has been going on for about two months. Some stations release limited amounts of gas, but due to severe congestion, queues are extremely long, especially for vehicles. As for cooking gas cylinders, they are very difficult to obtain, which has pushed many people to rely on firewood as an alternative." 13. Various of people collecting water from tanker truck, plastic containers on ground 14. Elderly man 15. Child Aden, Yemen - Jan 9, 2026 (CGTN - No access Chinese mainland) 16. Various of pedestrians, traffic Storyline Residents in Yemen's southern port city of Aden are facing severe shortages of food, healthcare and other basic necessities, as years of economic instability and political volatility continue to erode living conditions and public infrastructure. The crisis is acutely felt within households, where dwindling resources and a lack of reliable incomes force families to make difficult daily choices between medical care and other essential needs. The United Nations estimates that around 21 million people across Yemen will require humanitarian assistance this year, an increase from 19.5 million in 2025, amid funding cuts that threaten access to vital services. For many, the strain manifests first in the struggle to obtain healthcare. Medical facilities, themselves under-resourced, face overwhelming demand from patients who often cannot afford treatment. "The biggest crisis facing patients is the lack of medicines and medical supplies. We try, as much as possible, to provide whatever we can, such as certain tests, but they are still not free. Many patients come to us unable to afford treatment due to the absence of salaries, and most of them request exemptions from payment. But how many people can we exempt, when there are simply not enough medical supplies available?" said Ensaf Al-Khamri, director of the Health Office in Aden's Al-Mualla District. With public sector salaries often unpaid for months, healthcare is increasingly becoming a private burden rather than a guaranteed public service. The challenges extend far beyond clinics, affecting nearly every aspect of daily survival. "Living conditions in Aden are very difficult. People have no gas, no electricity, and no access to proper medical services. We are suffering in the south, and many young people are unemployed," said Ashraf Mohammed, an Aden resident. Critical shortages of fuel and electricity have driven up the cost of everyday life, forcing households to spend more on cooking, transportation and other basic functions, leaving even fewer resources for emergencies such as illness. "The gas crisis has been going on for about two months. Some stations release limited amounts of gas, but due to severe congestion, queues are extremely long, especially for vehicles. As for cooking gas cylinders, they are very difficult to obtain, which has pushed many people to rely on firewood as an alternative," said Saeed Khaled, another resident. Aid workers warn that the combined pressures of disease, unemployment, unpaid wages and rising costs are placing sustained strain on civilians across the city, with little prospect of near-term relief. For most residents in Aden, daily life remains a cycle of managing illness, securing basic supplies, and finding ways to endure in an environment defined by scarcity and uncertainty.
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