Philippine Canadian Inquirer (National)

More than 21M people in Yemen need aid, protection: UN chief

- ANADOLU

GENEVA – More than 21 million people – two in three Yemeni children, women, and men – need assistance and protection, the UN chief said.

UN Secretary- General Antonio Guterres was speaking at a conference in Geneva – hosted by Switzerlan­d and Sweden – where an appeal for USD4.3 billion was made to support the most vulnerable people in Yemen.

“We ended last year with a measure of hope for the future of Yemen,” Guterres said. “After years of death, displaceme­nt, destructio­n, starvation, and suffering, the truce delivered real dividends for people.”

He said civilian flights resumed from Yemen’s capital Sanaa and vital supplies arrived through the port of Hudaydah.

“But the truce lapsed though after only six months,” the UN chief said, noting that Yemen’s economy is in enormous difficulti­es and essential services risk collapsing.

“And humanitari­an needs continue to soar while access is constraine­d, and funding perenniall­y falls short,” Guterres added.

Separately, the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said although 2022 witnessed some promising developmen­ts in Yemen, its conflict is entering its eighth year with no apparent long-term resolution.

The ICRC said despite a months-long truce, Yemen remains in a precarious situation, with essential infrastruc­ture in tatters and two-thirds of its people entirely drained by a lack of access to basic needs.

Worrying developmen­t

Funding shortages risk “turbo-charging” Yemen’s humanitari­an woes from bad to worse, the Red Cross said.

“For the first time in 11 years, the operations of the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross and the Internatio­nal Red Cross and Red Crescent

Movement in Yemen were underfunde­d last year,” Robert Mardini, ICRC’s director-general, said.

“This is a worrying developmen­t which, if not reversed, will undermine the progress of neutral and impartial humanitari­an action,” Mardini added.

The Red Cross said 21.6 million people in Yemen need humanitari­an assistance and protection.

It said many families are now selling remaining possession­s to afford a meal.

Education has been disrupted for millions of children, and 4 million people remain displaced.

The ICRC said the direct effects of climate change are palpable, as 2022 saw a prolonged drought followed by heavy floods that further exhausted the remaining coping mechanisms.

“Each year that passes without a political resolution makes a recovery from the conflict more difficult. Even if a durable settlement were reached, humanitari­an needs would remain high for years,” Mardini said.

Yemen has been engulfed by violence and instabilit­y since 2014, when Iranian-aligned Houthi rebels captured much of the country, including the capital, Sanaa. ■

 ?? (WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATI­ON/FLICKR, CC BY-SA 2.0) ?? UN Secretary-General António Guterres
(WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATI­ON/FLICKR, CC BY-SA 2.0) UN Secretary-General António Guterres

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada