Texarkana Gazette

United Nations rushes aid to hunger-stricken Yemeni district

- By Maggie Michael

CAIRO—The United Nations and individual donors are rushing food to a desperate corner of northern Yemen where starving villagers were found to be living off leaves. Aid officials are searching for ways to ensure aid reaches those in need amid alarm that the country’s hunger crisis is worsening beyond the relief effort’s already strained capabiliti­es.

The aid push was directed at a district called Aslam where The Associated Press recently found some families eating leaves, partially due to local authoritie­s manipulati­ng aid distributi­on and resisting requests to set up biometric registrati­on for those receiving assistance.

In a sign of the difficulti­es in tracking Yemen’s near-famine, conditions appeared to be as bad or worse in a neighborin­g district, Khayran al-Maharraq.

On a recent day, Shouib Sakaf buried his 3-year-old daughter, Zaifa, the fifth child known to have died in the district this year from malnutriti­on-related illness. Sakaf prayed over a grave marked by piles of stones and tangled, dry branches from the surroundin­g mountain shrubs.

Zaifa was as old as Yemen’s civil war, waged between rebels known as Houthis and a coalition led by Saudi Arabia. Born in the war’s early days, Zaifa succumbed to the humanitari­an crisis it has caused—widespread hunger, the collapse of the economy and the breakdown of the health system. In her final weeks, she wasted away, her ribs protruding, her face and feet swollen. At a local medical facility which did not have enough supplies, her father was told she had to be taken to a hospital further away to treat kidney complicati­ons. He had no way to pay for transporta­tion there.

“Death came at 2:30 p.m.,” Sakaf said with a deep sigh. “Then we left.”

U.N. humanitari­an chief Mark Lowcock issued a dire warning to the Security Council on Friday, ahead of the world body’s General Assembly, saying, “We are losing the fight against famine” in Yemen.

“We may now be approachin­g a tipping point, beyond which it will be impossible to prevent massive loss of life as a result of widespread famine across the country,” he said. “We are already seeing pockets of famine-like conditions, including cases where people are eating leaves.”

Across Yemen, around 2.9 million women and children are acutely malnourish­ed; another 400,000 children are fighting for their lives, in the same condition as Zaifa was. This year, the U.N. and humanitari­an groups provided assistance to more than 8 million of the most vulnerable Yemenis who don’t know when their next meal will come. That is a dramatic expansion from 2017, when food was reaching 3 million people a month in the country of nearly 29 million.

Lowcock spoke after the AP alerted U.N. relief officials to the villagers in Aslam district, an isolated area in Hajjah province.

After the AP report, activists launched an online campaign called: “Rescue Aslam” with bank account details to collect donations. Some 30 food baskets financed by individual donors were distribute­d over the past days.

The U.N.’s World Food Program carried out an investigat­ion in Aslam and found that aid hasn’t been reaching all targeted beneficiar­ies. It has since sent trucks carrying 10,000 food packages to the district, each meant to feed one family for a month. Distributi­on of the aid is still pending the finalizati­on of registrati­on lists.

Getting relief to those in need has been complicate­d because internatio­nal agencies are required to work from lists that are often compiled by local Houthi authoritie­s. Critics accuse those authoritie­s of favoritism in putting together the lists.

Stephen Anderson, the director of the WFP, said there is a “retargetin­g exercise” underway to make sure that “the poorest and hungriest and most marginaliz­ed people, wherever they are, are targeted first.”

The agency is introducin­g a biometric registrati­on to establish a database of beneficiar­ies, including their finger prints to avoid forgery and duplicatio­ns.

Anderson said the system “will help give us an assurance” that situations like those in Hajjah are prevented or at least minimized.

A senior relief official said local authoritie­s have resisted implementi­ng biometric registrati­on and the main Houthi-run aid body, known by the acronym NAMCHA, has sought to do the registrati­on and control the database.

The official expressed concerns about the Houthis’ pushback. “They put a condition we can’t accept,” he said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of fears of problems with authoritie­s.

The conflict in Yemen, the Arab world’s poorest country, began with the 2014 takeover of the capital, Sanaa, by the Houthis, an Iranianbac­ked Shiite movement that toppled the internatio­nally recognized government. The Saudi-led coalition launched to fight the Houthis has imposed sea, land, and air embargo while waging a devastatin­g bombing campaign.

The conflict has left more than 10,000 civilians dead, driven millions from their homes and sparked a cholera epidemic.

U.N. officials have warned that millions more could very quickly become unable to feed themselves. The rapid depreciati­on of the currency, the rial, has caused food prices to rise at least 35 percent. Government salaries have largely not been paid for two years. Officials also fear a coalition-led assault on the Houthi-held port of Hodeida could shut it down. Nearly 80 percent of Yemen’s imports come through the Red Sea city, including much of the humanitari­an aid.

At least 20 children are known to have died of starvation already this year in Hajjah province, where Aslam and Khayran al-Maharraq districts are located. The real number is likely far higher, since few families report it when their children die at home.

Khayran al-Maharraq district is one of the most densely populated districts in Hajjah, with some 100,000 people, including many displaced from Hodieda and war-torn border areas. Cholera hit the area hard last year and doctors fear another wave of the disease with the rainy season coming on. Six people have died of cholera since August, according to Mekkiya Mahdi, head of Aslam’s health center.

An official at Khayran al-Maharraq hospital said the facility receives more than 60 cases of severe malnutriti­on a month, but has to send them elsewhere because it has no supplies.

A local aid worker said WFP aid covers some 3,700 families in the district—“only the most needy, and even those are not entirely covered.” He said food baskets sometimes arrive with expired grain. UNICEF has also done two cash distributi­ons to 5,000 people—one equivalent to $15 each, the other $30, he said. Most families need four bags of flour a month, each costing the equivalent now of $20.

He and the hospital official spoke on condition of anonymity, wary of hurting ties with authoritie­s or agencies.

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ A severely malnourish­ed infant is seen at the Aslam Health Center in Hajjah, Yemen. The situation in Aslam district is a sign of the holes in an internatio­nal aid system that is already overwhelme­d but is the only thing standing between Yemen’s people and massive death from starvation amid the country’s 3-year civil war.
Associated Press ■ A severely malnourish­ed infant is seen at the Aslam Health Center in Hajjah, Yemen. The situation in Aslam district is a sign of the holes in an internatio­nal aid system that is already overwhelme­d but is the only thing standing between Yemen’s people and massive death from starvation amid the country’s 3-year civil war.

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