In Mecca, Saudi Arabia’s King Salman, like Muslims around the world, has marked the end of the fasting month of Ramadan and the start of the Eid al-Fitr festival.<br /><br /> It is supposed to be one of the most joyous occasions in the Muslim calendar but in Yemen, hit by fighting and airstrikes by a Saudi-led Arab coalition, joy is in short supply.<br /><br /> “Most people will not feel the joy of Eid because they are displaced from their homes and some children are homeless,” said Mabrouk al-Matari, a resident of the capital, Sanaa.<br /><br /> “People are in a very difficult situation. Times are tough. They don’t have an income. They are having to look for their daily bread.”<br /><br /> Eid is upon us. But it doesn’t feel like Eid in #Yemen. http://t.co/bbeDzEl6Fh Oxfam staff blog from #YemenCrisis pic.twitter.com/a7d47PBNKv— Oxfam International (@Oxfam) 17 Juillet 2015<br /><br /> Only a handful of residents could be seen celebrating Eid in Syria’s divided city of Aleppo. <br /><br /> It is a main battleground in the country’s civil war an