Oman Daily Observer

Shippers shun Hodeida due to insecurity: UN

A drop in arrival of wheat and other supplies would affect food stocks in Yemen where 14 million are facing possible starvation

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GENEVA/SANAA: Operations at Yemen’s lifeline port of Hodeida have nearly halved in two weeks, with shipping companies deterred by insecurity in the flashpoint Ansar Allah-held city, the UN’S World Food Programme (WFP) said on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, aid agencies have launched a polio vaccinatio­n campaign in Yemen to inoculate up to five million children under the age of five across the impoverish­ed Arab state whose healthcare system has been crippled by more than three years of war.

A Saudi-led Arab coalition is fighting to oust the Ansar Allah movement that has taken over most of northern Yemen, including the capital Sanaa, and restore President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi to full control.

As 70 per cent of imports come in through the vital Hodeida port, a drop in the arrival of wheat and other supplies would affect food stocks in Yemen where 14 million people are facing possible starvation after nearly four years of war, WFP said.

“WFP is very concerned about a nearly 50 per cent decrease in operations at Hodeida port over last two weeks,” spokesman Herve Verhoosel said.

“Shipping companies appear to be reluctant to call to Hodeida port because of the high levels of insecurity in the city,” he said.

The WFP, which provides rations to eight million Yemenis each month, has been trying to scale up to avert famine. It has two more months worth of food stocks in the impoverish­ed country, Verhoosel said.

“Any disruption­s to the port operations would hamper humanitari­an efforts to prevent famine as well as increase food prices in markets even further, making it extremely difficult for the majority of Yemenis to feed their families,” he said.

On Monday, a single vessel was at Hodeida port, which was “not normal” for a port whose current offloading capacity is for seven vessels, he said, adding: “We need to reassure the private sector to say come back to the port.”

UN envoy for Yemen Martin Griffiths, who was in Riyadh on Monday, is seeking a UN role in supervisin­g the port and continues his consultati­ons ahead of peace talks planned in Sweden next month, UN spokesman Rheal Leblanc said.

The three-day polio vaccinatio­n campaign which began on Monday is organised by the UN children’s agency Unicef, the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) and the health ministry of the Ansar Allah movement which controls most population centres in the country where millions face starvation, making them more vulnerable to diseases.

Meanwhile, the United Nations is helping hundreds of Ethiopians living in Yemen to return home, the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration said on Tuesday.

On Monday, the first batch of over 100 migrants were returned and more than 300 others are due to follow this week, many of them children, the IOM said.

The UN’S World Food Programme, which provides rations to eight million Yemenis each month, has been trying to scale up to avert famine

 ?? — AFP ?? A partial view of the port of the Red Sea city of Hodeida.
— AFP A partial view of the port of the Red Sea city of Hodeida.

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