Arab News

Kingdom offers port of Jazan to be used to help flow of humanitari­an relief to Yemen

- ARAB NEWS

Al-Rabeeah said that the Kingdom had offered the Saudi Port of Jazan to be used along with other ports to help the flow of humanitari­an aid into Yemen.

Al-Rabeeah, who is at a highlevel meeting in Rome for the Partnershi­p for Permanent Peace in Yemen, condemned the 16 attacks of Houthi militias against UN and other relief organizati­ons during 2015-2017, which involved murder, kidnapping, imprisonme­nt and closure of offices, as well as extortion and looting.

The Houthi militias had closed ports and offices of internatio­nal organizati­ons working in Yemen and seized 65 ships, 124 relief convoys, and 628 aid shipments. He said the Houthi militias were targeting residentia­l areas, humanitari­an aid and humanitari­an workers.

Al-Rabeeah said that the UN and internatio­nal community should do more to hold militias accountabl­e for hampering humanitari­an work, and for their targeting of civilians and use of children in war crimes. Houthi militias had recruited more than 20,000 Yemeni children, according to human rights organizati­ons. He said that the Kingdom was rehabilita­ting 2,000 children who were previously recruited by the militias.

Al-Rabeeah said that total aid provided by the Kingdom to Yemen from April 2015 to October 2017 reached $8.27 billion, noting that (KSRelief) delivered aid used airdrops of food and medical aid in the city of Taiz to break the blockade of the militias.

KSRelief delivered 161 projects in Yemen through 86 local and internatio­nal partners. These projects included food security, nutrition, shelters, social support, and environmen­tal sanitation.

Al-Rabeeah said that KSRelief was particular­ly interested in programs helping women and children, and ran 148 such programs in Yemen. KSRelief work covered 80 projects in education, protection, food security, health, nutrition, water, environmen­tal sanitation, and personal hygiene.

Al-Rabeeah said that the Kingdom had been working to limit the spread of cholera in Yemen. It donated more than $76 million to the Yemeni Ministry of Public Health and Population, the WHO, and UNICEF. KSRelief sent a convoy carrying more than 550,000 tons of medical equipment to Yemeni regions to fight the epidemic. The rate of recovery, he said, had reached 99.5 percent, which meant many organizati­ons could close Cholera treatment centers in some areas.

He also called on UN and humanitari­an organizati­ons in Yemen to decentrali­ze their humanitari­an efforts and avoid opening their headquarte­rs in one city only.

ROME: Yemeni ports under the control of the legitimate government can receive humanitari­an aid, Abdullah Al-Rabeeah, general supervisor of the King Salman Humanitari­an Aid and Relief Center (KSRelief), has said.

 ??  ?? KSRelief General Supervisor Abdullah Al-Rabeeah addresses a high-level meeting in Rome on Friday. (SPA)
KSRelief General Supervisor Abdullah Al-Rabeeah addresses a high-level meeting in Rome on Friday. (SPA)

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