Times of Suriname

Displaced Yemenis suffer as aid shortfall closes clinics

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HAJJAH - Ahmed Mansour and his colleagues worked eight months without pay in a health centre in a Yemeni displaceme­nt camp out of concern for their patients. But this month they closed its doors. “Enough is enough now, we can’t go on,” said administra­tive worker Mansour, who financiall­y supports his and his deceased brother’s family. His salary, while he was still paid, was around $180 a month.

Across Yemen health, sanitation and nutrition services that keep millions from starvation and disease are gradually closing amid an acute funding shortage for the world’s largest humanitari­an crisis. The United Nations said last week 12 of its 38 major programmes have shut or scaled down, and between August and September 20 programmes face further reductions or closure. In the Mahraba displaceme­nt camp in Hajjah province, resident Fatehia Jaber keeps going back to check if their local clinic, a tent printed with the logo of UN children agency UNICEF, has re-opened.

“My son is sick, short of breath ... We live in an unstable situation and want a working hospital,” Jaber said from her temporary home. Yemen’s economy and health system has been devastated by five years of war. Many healthcare workers, and other public servants, have not been paid for up to three years. Aid agencies try to keep critical services ticking over with small incentive payments to staff, but that leg of support is now crumbling as funds run dry. In a snapshot of what is happening across Yemen, four clinics supported by UNICEF and other partners with around 119 staff in displaceme­nt camps in Hajjah, one of the poorest parts of Yemen, have temporaril­y closed.

“Support from humanitari­an agencies for critical services like health and nutrition has been gradually reducing due to lack of funding,” UNICEF’s Yemen representa­tive Sherin Varkey said. UNICEF lacks 64% of its total humanitari­an funding needs, Varkey said. Yemen’s aid response is so poorly funded this year due to competing demands such as the coronaviru­s pandemic, and longstandi­ng donor concerns about local authoritie­s’ interferen­ce in aid distributi­on. (Reuters)

 ??  ?? A girl looks through the fence of a closed clinic at a camp for internally displaced people near Abs of Hajjah province, Yemen August 19, 2020. Picture taken August 19, 2020. (Photo:Reuters)
A girl looks through the fence of a closed clinic at a camp for internally displaced people near Abs of Hajjah province, Yemen August 19, 2020. Picture taken August 19, 2020. (Photo:Reuters)

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