Yemen displaced into hunger
Associated Press photographer Hani Mohammed captures the desperation faced by so many in Yemen.
Associated Press photographer Hani Mohammed captures the desperation faced by so many in Yemen.
YAHIA Hussein has already lost a five-month-old son who wasted away and died as they fled their village in northern Yemen.
Now living in a camp for the displaced, he is running out of ways to feed his other four children.
Jobless, he has no way to afford food, and he says he hasn’t received international aid for several months.
His wife gives their children mouldy bread crumbs mixed with water and salt. Some days she feeds them a paste made of boiled leaves from a vine called “halas.”
“We left everything behind. We walked for hours on foot, carrying nothing, not even one rial, no food or water,” he tells The Associated Press at the camp in the northern province of Hajjah.
They are among millions of Yemenis who lost everything – homes, jobs, loved ones – in nearly four years of civil war. The conflict has pushed the country of 29 million people to the brink of famine. At least eight million have no food other than what aid agencies provide.
The figure is likely to rise to 11.5 million as more people become unable to afford food because the worsening economic crisis caused by the war, United Nation agencies warn. The currency is crumbling in value, sending prices soaring.
According to Unicef, over seven million children face food insecurity.
“Today, 1.8 million children under the age of five are facing acute malnutrition, and 400,000 are affected by severe acute malnutrition,” says Geert Cappelaere, regional director of UNICEF.
The humanitarian disaster has come as the US-backed Saudi-led coalition since 2015 has waged a relentless campaign of airstrikes and imposed a blockade, aiming to uproot Shiite rebels known as Houthis, who took over northern and central Yemen.
Besides airstrikes, northern Yemen has also seen heavy barrages back and forth across the border
with Saudi Arabia as Saudi forces battle rebels.
Hussein and his family had to flee their border village of al-Shada because of non-stop strikes and shelling. As they fled, the fivemonth-old died in his mother’s arms. Hussein is not sure if it was from dehydration or malnutrition.
For the past four months, they have lived in a shack made of sticks, blankets and plastic sheets in a camp in Aslam district near the city of Abs.
The 46-year-old Hussein once grew grapes and pomegranates and thrived off trade in markets across the border in Saudi Arabia. He lost his livelihood, sold all his goats but one and cut down on meals to one a day.
The numbers of displaced are only growing. In August – September, 20,000 people fleeing the border town of Bani Hassan flowed into Abs, Doctors Without Borders reported. The aid organisation, which operates in the main hospital in Abs, said it treated more than 300 people wounded the fighting. A number of women and children in late stages of malnutrition or cholera or with com- plications from giving birth have died, the group said, without giving figures. Doctors Without Borders said it is ready to deploy mobile medical teams around the area every day but has only received permission from Houthi authorities for seven days the past month.
Welcoming a call by the UN on Wednesday to relaunch peace talks within a month, Cappelaere warns that ending the country’s war will not save all of them.
“What we need after stop ping the war is (to create) a government mechanism that puts at the centre the people and children.
“The war is exacerbating the situation that was already bad before because of years of underdevelopment” in the Arab world’s poorest nation, Cappelaere says.