<span>I</span><span>n the early 1980s, Fatehia Al Dhaybani </span><span>sold tropical fruits, such as doum and guava, in the city of Mukalla in Yemen's southeastern province of Hadramout. She dropped out of school early and </span><span>selling fruit was her main source of income, as her father, who married her mother later in life, was ageing and emaciated. "I was very poor," she tells </span><span><em>The National</em></span><span>.</span> <span>But today</span><span> Al Dhaybani is one of the most successful businesswomen in</span><span> the province, managing a </span><span>company worth millions of Yemeni rials</span><span>, while </span><span>overcom</span><span>ing her father's death, extreme poverty and war. </span><span>She owns Afrena Al Dhaybani, through which she and her team do brides' make-up before their weddings, as well as import</span><span> beauty machines and products. We meet at the company's headquarters, a four-storey building coated in marble </span><span>in </span><span>Mukalla</span><span>. "Life has never been easy</span><span>, but my business is booming, thank God</span><span>," she says</span><span>. </span> <span>The turning point in Al Dhaybani's life came when a childhood friend told her about an embroidery training course </span><span>shortly after she </span><span>left school. "I told her I couldn't afford the </span><span>fees. She told me her father would pay it</span><span>," Al Dhaybani says.</span> <span>That didn't last long, however, and after </span><span>only two months she was forced to leave the course </span><span>because her friend stopped going. But Al Dhaybani didn't let that deter her from putting what she had already learnt to good use. "At home, I began practising embroidery and turned the skills into a business," she explains. "I sewed clothes and sold them. When I could not cope with the growing demand for my sewing, I hired women to help me."</span> <span>Al Dhaybani says she soon decided to expand her burgeoning empire. She bought a piece of land and built a house, moving her business into her home so she could be close to her </span><span>parents. Later, she bought another piece of land, where her </span><span>offices now sit</span><span>. It was around then that she chose to abandon embroidery and embraced the beauty industry instead. That proved to be a smart move, </span><span>because her company</span><span> has since gone from strength to strength.</span> <span>In 2016, </span><span>a year after the Yemen Civil War began, UAE-backed forces </span><span>drove militants out of Mukalla, </span><span>with the city </span><span>consequently attracting thousands of people who </span><span>fled fighting in their hometowns. </span><span>Amid all this, Al Dhaybani's business has flourished. "Life here would be </span><span>better if there </span><span>were good roads, cleaner streets and no power cuts," she says. "We do not want anything more than this ...</span><span> But I am happy with my life".</span> <span>Dr Fawzia Nasher, head of the Yemeni Businesswomen Council, which was set up in 2007, says women like Al Dhaybani are increasingly rare in the country. </span><span>Nasher says many Yemen</span><span>i businesswomen have been </span><span>forced to shut down their companies as a result of the conflict</span><span> or have even fled</span><span>. "Most have relocated their projects to Malaysia, Dubai, Turkey, Jordan, Egypt </span><span>or Pakistan," Nasher adds.</span> <span>But this hasn't stopped Najella Shamasan from pursuing her business ambitions</span><span> in the southern city of Aden</span><span>. A serial entrepreneur, she is also the head of the provincial branch of the Yemeni Businesswomen Council and a human rights activist.</span> <span>Shamasan launched her first start-up in 1979, when she opened a workshop for welding and soldering, where workers made windows and fixed damaged tankers. As her business grew, she says she </span><span>offered her services to the government's Yemen Oil Company. </span><span>She also </span><span>opened a sewing centre in Sana</span><span>a that specialised in making military uniforms.</span> <span>When the 1994 civil war</span><span> began, Shamasan returned to Aden, where she traded in</span><span> scraps from heavy vehicles and started collecting used oil from garages and petrol stations, selling them to a local company that recycled and exported it all.</span> <span>"As I was fond of heritage and art, I </span><span>also</span><span> built a nice museum in Aden, where traditional fashionable clothes, accessories and traditional households are displayed," she says. Some of those items were also put on sale </span><span>in local hotels.</span> <span>In 2015, however, t</span><span>he Iran-backed Houthi rebels</span><span> stormed </span><span>Aden</span><span> and Shamasan's thriving businesses were destroyed. "I lost everything in the war," she says. "I am </span><span>slowly trying to revive my work."</span><span> </span><span>So far, Shamasan says she has rebuilt her museum, turning it into a </span><span>place for foreign dignitaries </span><span>to visit</span><span>. "I neither give up nor stay jobless</span><span>," she adds determinedly.</span>