San Francisco Chronicle

Warnings of ‘starvation and death’

- By Ahmed al-Haj Ahmed al-Haj is an Associated Press writer.

SANAA, Yemen — The United Nations and more than 20 aid groups said Thursday that the Saudiled coalition’s tightening of a blockade on war-torn Yemen could bring millions of people closer to “starvation and death.”

The U.N.’s humanitari­an chief warned a day earlier that unless the coalition lifts its blockade, Yemen will face “the largest famine the world has seen for many decades, with millions of victims.”

The coalition closed all ports and halted aid shipments after Yemen’s Houthi rebels fired a ballistic missile over the weekend that was intercepte­d near Riyadh. Saudi Arabia blamed the strike on Iran, which supports the Houthis but has denied arming them.

The U.S. has also accused Iran of supplying ballistic missiles to the Houthis, charges denied by the rebels, who insist they produced the missile used Saturday on their own.

The coalition, allied with Yemen’s internatio­nally recognized government, has been at war with the rebels since March 2015. The Houthis control most of northern Yemen, including the capital, Sanaa.

About two-thirds of Yemen’s population relies on imported supplies, said the aid groups, which include CARE, Save the Children and Islamic Relief. Over 20 million people need humanitari­an assistance, including 7 million facing “faminelike” conditions, they said. Food supplies are expected to run out within six weeks while vaccines will last only a month.

They urged an “immediate opening” of all air and seaports.

“If I have to compare Yemen to a person, I would say that this person is very sick, this person is very weakened, and is being drip-fed, so if you want to keep the patient alive, we need to reactivate drip-feeding as soon as possible,” said Robert Mardini, the Middle East director for the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross.

The blockade has already led to a fuel crisis in the rebel-held capital, Sanaa, where hundreds of cars lined the roads Wednesday after the Houthis ordered the closure of fuel stations. The rebels said they closed the stations after merchants refused to fix prices. The price of fuel has risen by 50 percent since the coalition tightened the blockade.

Yemeni officials also said those who need to be hospitaliz­ed abroad cannot leave the country. They said the Houthis in Sanaa and coalition-backed forces in the southern city of Aden are only interested in treating their own wounded.

Meanwhile, Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said he had proposed a fourpoint peace plan in 2015 that was still valid.

“In 2015, soon after Saudi coalition initiated war on Yemen, I wrote to the (U.N. secretary general) offering a 4-point peace plan: cease-fire; humanitari­an assistance; Intra-Yemeni dialogue; and inclusive government,” he tweeted.

“Over 2.5 years and many lives later, that plan is still valid today.”

 ?? Hani Mohammed / Associated Press ?? A girl scavenges at a garbage dump in a street in the capital, Sanaa. About two-thirds of Yemen’s 28 million inhabitant­s rely on imported supplies.
Hani Mohammed / Associated Press A girl scavenges at a garbage dump in a street in the capital, Sanaa. About two-thirds of Yemen’s 28 million inhabitant­s rely on imported supplies.

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