Five years of war in Yemen have affected the lives of millions of people and created a dire economic situation, with over 24 million people in need of humanitarian assistance and 17 million food insecure.
Salma Nasser was living with her husband and son in a small village 30km away from Aden. Salma completed high school but did not go to university because she got married.
It is widely believed in Yemen that marriage and domestic work are the ultimate destiny of women. Salma’s family believed she should be spending her days taking care of her household. She had no income of her own, and was beaten by her husband who was not working most days.
Unbeknown to her husband and her family, and wanting to achieve something for herself, Salma secretly completed high school. A week before receiving the certificate, her family found out and stopped her receiving the certificate, but the kind school manager handed her the certificate at home. However, she still had no income and no life of her own.
“I was in a violent relationship with my husband,” she says. “My little sons watched everything he did to me.” One day her husband kidnapped her son and fled to a remote area of Taiz governorate. “My suffering got worse and I began to think about working until I was a strong person,” says Salma.
Salma started working with humanitarian organisations as a volunteer in gender-based violence activities, which made some religious extremists in her area attack her. They said she was trying to change the Yemeni culture and help foreign influence over the country.