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A mother’s hunger

Famine-striken Yemen is considered the world’s largest humanitari­an crisis as conflict drags on and aid is cut off.

- By MAGGIE MICHAEL

Hagar Yehia only eats after her children have been fed, which means she often goes without. In famine-striken Yemen, mothers like her are going hungry to stave off their children’s starvation, as their situation deteriorat­es in the ongoing conflict.

THE young mother stepped onto the scale for the doctor. Even with all her black robes on, she weighed only 38kg. Umm Mizrah is pregnant, but starving herself to feed her children.

And her sacrifice may not be enough to save them.

The doctor’s office is covered with dozens of pictures of emaciated babies who have come through Al-Sadaqa Hospital in Aden, casualties of a three-year war in Yemen that has left millions of people on the edge of famine.

Mothers like Umm Mizrah are often the only defense against the hunger that has killed thousands. They skip meals, they sleep to escape the gnawing in their stomachs. They hide bony faces and emaciated bodies in voluminous black abaya robes and veils.

Her 17-month-old son, Mizrah, weighs 5.8kg, around half the normal weight for his age.

He showed all the signs of “severe acute malnutriti­on,” the most dire stage of hunger. His legs and feet were swollen, he wasn’t getting enough protein. When the doctor pressed a finger into the skin of his feet, the indentatio­n lingered.

Around 2.9 million women and children are acutely malnourish­ed; another 400,000 children are fighting for their lives, in the same condition as Mizrah.

Nearly a third of Yemen’s population – 8.4 million of its 29 million people – rely completely on food aid or else they would starve. That number grew by a quarter over the past year.

Aid agencies warn that parts of Yemen could soon start to see widespread death from famine. More and more people are reliant on aid that is already failing to reach people.

The war, now three years old, drags on interminab­ly between Yemen’s Syiah Houthi rebels who hold the country’s north, and the Saudi-led coalition, armed and backed by the United States. It is unknown how many have died, since authoritie­s are not able to track cases. Save the Children late last year estimated that 50,000 children may have died in 2017 of extreme hunger or disease, given that up to 30% of children with untreated cases of severe acute malnutriti­on die.

“Unfortunat­ely, now Yemen is considered to be the world’s largest humanitari­an emergency,” said Stephen Anderson, the Yemen director of the World Food Programme (WFP). Some 18 million people do not know where their next meal is coming from.

Even before the war, the Arab world’s poorest nation struggled to feed itself. It is a country of deserts and mountains with dwindling water resources where only two to four percent of the land is cultivated, so almost all of its food and supplies must be imported.

The war has shattered everything that kept Yemen just above starvation. Coalition warplanes blasted hospitals, schools, farms, factories, bridges and roads.

The coalition has also clamped a land-sea-and-air embargo on Houthi-controlled areas, including the Red Sea port of Hodeida, once the entry point of 70% of Yemen’s imports. Now far less gets in as coalition ships off shore allow through only UN-inspected and approved commercial ships and aid, often with delays.

The US gives significan­t backing to the coalition campaign, providing intelligen­ce and billions of dollars-worth of munitions as well logistical help like air-to-air refueling of coalition warplanes. The US State Department says Washington has provided nearly US$854 mil (RM3.4bil) to address the humanitari­an situation in Yemen.

In many places there is food in the markets, but people simply can’t afford it, since salaries are going unpaid, work is harder to find and the currency has collapsed in value.

Umm Mizrah and her husband, who have three young daughters in addition to Mizrah, usually eat one meal a day, often just bread and tea. When the doctor in Aden

told her malnutriti­on can be fatal, she trembled. The parents felt helpless.

“He was playful and doing fine, then he started to get sick and stopped breastfeed­ing and playing,” she said quietly.

The Associated Press travelled across southern Yemen, territory held by the coalition-backed government, and visited several districts among the 107 areas nationwide that the United Nations warns are most likely to fall into outright famine.

It is a landscape of desperatio­n.

Severe acute malnutriti­on

A video filmed by a doctor shows eight-month-old Fadl in his last days of life.

The baby twitches his legs in pain. He’s crying but he is so dehydrated his eyes can’t produce tears. His belly is inflated as taut as a balloon. You can easily count the 12 rows of protruding ribs on his rapidly palpitatin­g chest. His desperate parents plastered his head with black henna, a dye that is used as a folk cure.

Fadl’s mother, Fatma Halabi, was eight months pregnant when she and thousands of others fled the area around her district of Mowza as government forces descended on the Houthis.

Separated from her husband, Halabi led her four children and two goats across the Great Valley, the arid plain spilling down from the mountains toward the city of Mocha on the Red Sea.

In April last year, she gave birth to Fadl under a tree. And then fainted.

Eventually, she and her husband reunited.

When asked what she had eaten that day, Halabi said, “Bor,” the local Arabic word for flour. “We stay patient,” she said. “We have to feed the children.”

When she gets hungry, she lies down and tries to sleep.

Often she and her husband eat one meal a day.

Unable to breastfeed Fadl, she gave him goat or camel milk, which lack the nutrients of breast milk or formula. The newborn kept getting fever and diarrhoea, so she repeatedly borrowed money to take him to the hospital in Mocha.

The hospital has seen 600 malnutriti­on cases over the past 10 months, but is so short on supplies it doesn’t even have pain relievers for headaches, said one doctor, Abdel-Rehim Ahmed. It has no therapeuti­c feeding centre. None of its doctors have been trained in treating malnutriti­on.

And Mocha is swelling with 40,000 displaced people.

Left untreated, prolonged malnutriti­on causes the body to lose its stock of carbohydra­tes, fats, and proteins. The body starts to eat itself. The brain struggles to find energy, the heart shrinks, and the skin cracks, exposing the body to infections. The kidney and the liver stop functionin­g properly, so toxins build up inside the body, leading to a vicious cycle of disease.

At eight months old, Fadl weighed 2.9kg, a third of the normal weight. Unable to pay for a hospital stay, Fadl’s parents took him home, where he passed away soon after.

“Sometimes I wake up in the morning and I remember he’s no longer there and I start to cry,” Halabi said. “Who wouldn’t cry for their children?”

No more aid

Even in parts of Yemen that are wrested from Houthi rule, starvation persists, or gets worse.

In late February, mothers carrying babies mobbed the nutrition centre at the main hospital in al-Khoukha, a little town on the Red Sea, expecting to receive monthly allotments of baby formula and nutrient supplies.

They left empty-handed. Al-Khoukha was taken back from the Houthis in December by coalition-backed forces marching up the coast. In rebel hands, the town had been directly connected to the Hodeida port farther north, the biggest entryway for internatio­nal aid into Yemen.

Now cut off from the port, no supplies have come from the south.

“We have no vaccinatio­ns. There are shortages in medicines. The aid stopped,” said Abdullah Doubala, head of al-Khoukha health departas ment.

The burden is increasing families fleeing fighting elsewhere stream into al-Khoukha, bringing more thin and hungry children.

Doctors estimate that

40% percent of the children in the town suffer from malnutriti­on.

It isn’t just those driven from their homes who suffer.

Isolated in a mountain valley, the 450 residents of the village of Qibli are wasting away. Boys and girls running around barefoot in the dirt paths are stunted.

Most of the men here are solher diers, who haven’t been paid for months, or farm labourers, who can no longer find work.

Any money they have goes in search of food. Sitting on the floor of her home, Sherine fed her two children scraps of bread dipped in “besbas,” a sauce of tomato and garlic. She took no bites herself.

Her one-year-old daughter Amal, has been diagnosed with acute malnutriti­on and can no longer stand up.

Aid hasn’t come to Qibli since 2016, according to relief volunteer Rashid al-Khoushbi. Only four families in the area were on the WFP lists for food aid. Most households here are considered to have a male breadwinne­r, making them a lower priority.

In the area’s main town, al-Mallah, doctors were nowhere to be seen at the hospital. No one pays them so many staffers often don’t show up.

Sitting in bed, Umm Molham was so weak she could barely lift her 13-month-old son. When the AP met her, she had been at the hospital for three days waiting for someone to examine him.

The toddler had been vomiting, coughing and suffered from diarrhea. The family can only afford to give him formula once a day. His body is emaciated, his eyes sunken, his belly

His mother sat helplessly, the baby in her lap.

“She is not breastfeed­ing,” said husband, Anwar Said. “She doesn’t eat well and has no milk.”

Umm Molham didn’t say a word, even when asked questions, lost in her internal world of frailty and

hunger. – AP

 ?? — Photos: AP ?? Hagar Yahia, a Yemeni woman, shows the amount of flour she uses to make a loaf of bread. When she or her husband find work, they may have some vegetables. But most often they eat a heavy bread called ‘tawa’ that fills the stomach longer, Yahia says.
— Photos: AP Hagar Yahia, a Yemeni woman, shows the amount of flour she uses to make a loaf of bread. When she or her husband find work, they may have some vegetables. But most often they eat a heavy bread called ‘tawa’ that fills the stomach longer, Yahia says.
 ??  ?? Many families across southern Yemen describe how they live largely on bread and sweetened tea, sometimes just once a day.
Many families across southern Yemen describe how they live largely on bread and sweetened tea, sometimes just once a day.
 ??  ?? Many markets in Yemen have food but increasing numbers of people are unable to afford it in the economic collapse caused by the war. That is one reason aid agencies warn that parts of the country will soon fall into outright famine.
Many markets in Yemen have food but increasing numbers of people are unable to afford it in the economic collapse caused by the war. That is one reason aid agencies warn that parts of the country will soon fall into outright famine.
 ??  ?? Mothers and children crowd into a centre for treating malnutriti­on but they leave empty-handed as supplies have run out.
Mothers and children crowd into a centre for treating malnutriti­on but they leave empty-handed as supplies have run out.
 ?? Photo: AP ??
Photo: AP
 ??  ?? A doctor shows on her mobile phone a photo of Fadl, an 8-month-old Yemeni boy taken in his last days before he starved to death, in a hospital in Mocha, Yemen.
A doctor shows on her mobile phone a photo of Fadl, an 8-month-old Yemeni boy taken in his last days before he starved to death, in a hospital in Mocha, Yemen.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Awsaf, a five-year-old Yemeni girl, eats bread and drinks tea – which on many days is the only food she has – crouching next to her mother.
Awsaf, a five-year-old Yemeni girl, eats bread and drinks tea – which on many days is the only food she has – crouching next to her mother.
 ??  ?? A mother pulls the veil off of her malnourish­ed five-year-old daughter to feed her. Towns and villages all around southern Yemen are full of scrawny and stunted children.
A mother pulls the veil off of her malnourish­ed five-year-old daughter to feed her. Towns and villages all around southern Yemen are full of scrawny and stunted children.

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