The Jerusalem Post

UN hopes imports will help stave off famine in Yemen as diphtheria spreads

- • By HEBA KANSO and THIN LEI WIN

GENEVA (Reuters) – United Nations aid agencies called on Tuesday for the Yemeni port of Hodeidah to remain open beyond Friday, the date set by a Saudi-led military coalition, to permit continued delivery of life-saving goods.

Yemen is the world’s worst humanitari­an crisis, where 8.3 million people are entirely dependent on external food aid and 400,000 children suffer from severe acute malnutriti­on, a potentiall­y lethal condition, they said.

The Arab coalition, under internatio­nal pressure, eased a three-week blockade that was imposed on Yemeni ports and airports in November in response to a ballistic missile fired by the Houthi movement towards the Saudi capital Riyadh.

Four mobile cranes arrived in the important Houthi-controlled Hodeidah port, the UN said on Monday, after the coalition agreed to let them into Yemen, where nearly three years of war have pushed it to the verge of famine.

“The port in theory is going be open to the 19th of this month. Then we don’t know if the coalition will close or [leave] it open,” Meritxell Relano, UNICEF representa­tive in Yemen, told a news briefing in Geneva.

“Obviously the feeling is that they extend this period so that the commercial goods can come in, but especially the fuel,” she said, speaking from Sanaa.

Before the conflict, Hodeidah port handled around 70% of Yemen’s imports, including food and humanitari­an supplies.

Fuel is vital to power water and sanitation stations to provide clean water and help avoid diseases, she said.

More than 11 million Yemeni children – virtually all – need humanitari­an assitance, Relano said. UNICEF figures show 25,000 Yemeni babies die at birth or before the age of one month.

“Yemen is in the grips of the world’s biggest hunger crisis,” World Food Program spokeswoma­n Bettina Luescher said. “This is a nightmare that is happening right now.”

A diphtheria outbreak in Yemen is “spreading quickly,” with 678 cases and 48 associated deaths in four months, Fadela Chaib of the World Health Organizati­on said.

 ?? (Khaled Abdullah/Reuters) ?? A PREMATURE BABY lies in an incubator at the child care unit of a hospital in Sanaa yesterday.
(Khaled Abdullah/Reuters) A PREMATURE BABY lies in an incubator at the child care unit of a hospital in Sanaa yesterday.

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