A Yemeni beekeeper shows a honeycomb at a farm in the city of Taiz. [Ahmad Al-Basha/AFP]

For Yemeni beekeeper Mohammed Saif, honey production used to be a lucrative business, but years of war and climate change have taken the buzz out of the family hives.

The business, handed down from father to son, “is slowly disappearing”, said Saif. “The bees are being hit by strange phenomena. Is it due to climate change or the effects of war? We really don’t know.”

Yemen, one of the world’s most impoverished countries, has been gripped by a deadly conflict since 2014, pitting the Iran-backed Houthis against government forces supported by a Saudi-led military coalition.

Hundreds of thousands of people have been killed in fighting or through illness and malnutrition over the past eight years, and the country’s infrastructure has been devastated.

But a fragile United Nations-brokered truce has held since April, bringing some respite to the country and its war-weary population. In the southwestern region of Taiz, Saif recently took stock of his hives in a rugged valley surrounded by mountains.

Before the war, Saif said, the family managed 300 hives. Now only 80 are left.

Experts consider Yemeni honey some of the best in the world, including the prized Royal Sidr known for its therapeutic properties.

The UN says honey plays a “vital role” in Yemen’s economy, with 100,000 households dependent on it for their livelihoods. But “enormous losses have been inflicted on the industry since the outbreak of the conflict”, the International Committee of the Red Cross said in a report in June.

“Armed conflict and climate change are threatening the continuity of a 3,000-year-old practice,” the ICRC said.

“Successive waves of displacement to flee violence, the impact of weapon contamination on production areas, and the growing impact of climate change are pushing thousands of beekeepers into precarity, significantly reducing production.”

 

A Yemeni beekeeper uses smoke to calm bees as he checks beehives at his farm. [Ahmad al-Basha/AFP]

Bees work on honeycombs inside a beehive in Yemen. [Ahmad al-Basha/AFP]

Experts consider Yemeni honey one of the best in the world, including the prized Royal Sidr known for its therapeutic properties. [Ahmad al-Basha/AFP]

The UN says honey plays a ‘vital role’ in Yemen’s economy, with 100,000 households dependent on it for their livelihoods. [Ahmad al-Basha/AFP]

A Yemeni vendor shows a packaged honeycomb at his shop in Taiz. [Ahmad al-Basha/AFP]

‘Enormous losses have been inflicted on the industry since the outbreak of the conflict,’ the International Committee of the Red Cross said in a report in June. [Ahmad al-Basha/AFP]

‘Armed conflict and climate change are threatening the continuity of a 3,000-year-old practice,’ the ICRC said. [Ahmad al-Basha/AFP]

Yemeni beekeepers check beehives at a farm on the outskirts of Taiz. [Ahmad al-Basha/AFP]