Bay of Plenty Times

Huge famine feared if decision goes ahead

Fears after Houthis declared terrorists by Americans

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The UN humanitari­an chief is urging the United States to reverse its decision to declare Yemen’s Houthi rebels a terrorist group, warning that the designatio­n will likely lead to “a largescale famine on a scale that we have not seen for nearly 40 years.”

Mark Lowcock planned to make the appeal in a speech to the UN Security Council this week, a copy of which was obtained by the Associated Press.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo declared the Iranian-backed Houthis a “foreign terrorist organisati­on” on Monday and said the designatio­n will take effect January on 19, President Donald Trump’s last full day in office before Joe Biden is inaugurate­d as president. Lowcock said data showed that 16 million of Yemen’s 30 million people will go hungry this year. “Already, about 50,000 people are essentiall­y starving to death in what is essentiall­y a small famine,” he said. “Another 5 million are just one step behind them.”

Lowcock said every decision made now must take this into account. Stressing that the terrorist designatio­n has companies pulling back from dealing with Yemenis, Lowcock warned that famine will not be prevented by the licenses the United States has said it will introduce so some humanitari­an aid and imports can continue to reach Yemen. “What would prevent it? A reversal of the decision,” Lowcock said.

He said Yemen imports 90 per cent of its food, nearly all purchased through commercial channels, so aid shipments cannot be enough to stave off hunger. “Aid agencies give people vouchers or cash to buy commercial­ly imported food in the market. Aid agencies cannot — they simply cannot — replace the commercial import system,” he said. Six years of war between a Us-backed Arab coalition and the Houthi rebels have been catastroph­ic for Yemen, killing more than 112,000 people and wrecking infrastruc­ture from roads and hospitals to water and electricit­y networks. It began with the Houthi takeover of the north in 2014, which prompted a destructiv­e air campaign by the Saudi-led coalition, aimed at restoring the internatio­nally recognised Government. Lowcock, the undersecre­tary-general for humanitari­an affairs, said the UN talked to commercial traders when the US first raised the possibilit­y of designatin­g the Houthis as terrorists, and they said they weren’t sure they would be able to continue importing food. After the US announceme­nt, Lowcock said, the UN went back to the traders and “the Yemeni companies who bring in most of the food are using words like ‘disaster,’ ‘havoc’ and ‘unimaginab­le’ when they describe to us what they fear is coming.”

He said global suppliers, bankers, shippers and insurers for Yemen companies are “very risk-averse” and some are now phoning their Yemeni partners saying “they now plan to walk away from Yemen altogether.”

“They say the risks are too high,” Lowcock said. “They fear being accidental­ly or otherwise caught up in US regulatory action which would put them out of business or into jail.”

He said some hope they can keep going but if they can “their best-case estimate is that costs could go up by 400 per cent” which would make it too expensive for many importers to do business and too expensive for Yemenis to buy food.

— AP

 ?? Photos / AP ?? A boy suffering from starvation seen at the Aslam Health Centre in Hajjah, Yemen, in 2018.
Photos / AP A boy suffering from starvation seen at the Aslam Health Centre in Hajjah, Yemen, in 2018.
 ??  ?? Companies fear that they won’t be able to import food after a decision made by Mike Pompeo.
Companies fear that they won’t be able to import food after a decision made by Mike Pompeo.

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