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Green shoots in Yemen

There is a body of opinion that argues Yemen’s problems are so deeply embedded that the country will never overcome them. It is true that the tribal culture in the north and the Cold War and post-unification legacies in the south – not to mention the scourges of terrorism and corruption – pose formidable obstacles. They block the creation of more representative democracy, rule of law and unity in the poorest country in the Middle East. So commentators may be understandably quick to assume that the only shooting going on in Yemen involves AK47s or more heavy weaponry.

These Cassandras of doom are wrong. There are green shoots sprouting all over Yemen. And these shoots are not just on the omnipresent qat plants to which the nation is addicted. The green shoots I’m talking about suggest that a better future for 25 million Yemenis is not an impossible dream.

In my travels around the country I’ve seen four particular green shoots:

Of course, green shoots can only develop into mature plants if they are nurtured and given adequate sunlight and space to grow. The Government of Yemen has a great responsibility to adopt the right economic and political policies to ensure this happens. Given Yemen’s last half century of failure and bloodshed, and the ongoing fragility following the conflict of 2011, the international community still has a vital role. It must continue to support Yemen’s development and growth through funding, advice and, when necessary, more decisive action against those who threaten it. Most immediately, it falls to the delegates of the National Dialogue Conference to work together over the summer in their nine working groups to encourage national reconciliation and build a consensus around proposals that will meet the demands of Yemen’s long-suffering people and improve their prospects.  If they do this, the green shoots around the country will have an opportunity to flourish to the benefit of all Yemenis.

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