The Star Malaysia

WHO: UN seeks to open air bridge to Yemen

-

SANAA: The United Nations is working to open a humanitari­an air bridge to take Yemeni cancer patients for treatment at qualified facilities, WHO country representa­tive for Yemen Nevio Zagaria said.

“The aim is to help patients suffering from cancer, chronic diseases and congenital anomalies receive the treatment they need,” Zagaria said, adding that 12 health conditions had been targeted.

These include leukaemia, cervical and thyroid cancer, and “patients who need... bone marrow and kidney transplant­s,” said Zagaria of the World Health Organisati­on (WHO).

The air bridge will operate for an initial trial period of six months, WHO said, without specifying where the patients would be sent for treatment.

“Eighty percent of patients for this flight are women and children,” Zagaria said, adding: “The air bridge is one of their last hopes.”

Twenty-two million people, or three in four Yemenis, require some form of humanitari­an assistance in the conflict-ravaged country.

On Sunday, hospital and medical sources said clashes and air strikes around the city of Hodeida killed 32 rebels.

A military source said the Saudi-led coalition fighting alongside the Yemeni government against Syiah Houthi rebels carried out an air raid on a radio station tower in the port city.

The coalition accuses the Teheran-aligned Houthis of smuggling arms from Iran through Hodeida and has imposed a partial blockade on the port, which the rebels seized in 2014.

The coalition in July announced a tempo-

rary ceasefire in Hodeida to give a chance to UN-brokered peace talks.

The UN’s Yemen envoy, Martin Griffiths, arrived on Sunday in the rebel-held capital Sanaa.

He is pushing for new peace talks after a failed attempt to bring the two sides together in Geneva earlier this month. Saudi Arabia and its allies intervened in 2015 in the conflict between embattled Yemeni President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi, whose government is recognised by the United Nations, and the Houthis. Nearly 10,000 people have since been killed and the country now stands on the brink of famine.

 ?? — AFP ?? Bare necessitie­s: Displaced Yemeni children from Hodeida playing in a shelter at a make-shift camp in a village in the northern district of Abs in Hajjah province.
— AFP Bare necessitie­s: Displaced Yemeni children from Hodeida playing in a shelter at a make-shift camp in a village in the northern district of Abs in Hajjah province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia