Imperial Valley Press

Aid chief: US naming Yemen rebels terrorists a famine threat

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UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The U.N. 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 large-scale 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 U.N. Security Council on Thursday, a copy of which was obtained by The Associated Press.

U. S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo declared the Irani - an-backed Houthis a “foreign terrorist organizati­on” late Sunday and said the designatio­n will take effect Jan. 19, President Donald Trump’s last full day in office before Joe Biden is inaugurate­d as president.

Lowcock said data show 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% 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 U.S.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 recognized government.

Lowcock, the undersecre­tary-general for humanitari­an affairs, said the U.N. talked to commercial traders when the U.S. 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 U. S. announceme­nt, Lowcock said, the U.N. 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.”

 ?? AP Photo/Hani Mohamed ?? In this 2018 file photo, a woman holds a malnourish­ed boy at the Aslam Health Center, in Hajjah, Yemen.
AP Photo/Hani Mohamed In this 2018 file photo, a woman holds a malnourish­ed boy at the Aslam Health Center, in Hajjah, Yemen.

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