The New Zealand Herald

Millions starve in Yemen as aid goes missing

Both sides of war accused of seizing food

- Maggie Michael in Taiz

Day after day, Nabil alHakimi, a humanitari­an official in Taiz, one of Yemen’s largest cities, went to work feeling he had a “mountain” on his shoulders.

Billions of dollars in food and other foreign aid was coming into his war-ravaged homeland, but millions of Yemenis were still living a step away from famine.

Reports of disarray and thievery streamed in to him last year from around Taiz — 5000 sacks of rice doled out without record of where they’d gone, 705 food baskets looted from a welfare agency’s warehouses, 110 sacks of grain pillaged from trucks trying to make their way through the craggy northern highlands overlookin­g the city.

Food donations were being snatched from the starving.

Documents reviewed by the Associated Press and interviews with al-Hakimi and other officials and aid workers show that thousands of families in Taiz are not getting food aid intended for them — often because it has been seized by armed units allied with the Saudi-led, United States-backed military coalition fighting in Yemen.

“The army that should protect the aid is looting the aid,” al-Hakimi told the AP.

Across Yemen, factions and militias on all sides of the conflict have blocked food aid from going to groups suspected of disloyalty, diverted it to frontline combat units or sold it for profit on the black market, according to public records and confidenti­al documents obtained by the AP and interviews with more than 70 aid workers, government officials and average citizens from six different provinces.

The problem of stolen aid is common in Taiz and other areas controlled by Yemen’s internatio­nally recognised Government, which is backed by the Saudi-led military coalition. It is even more widespread in territorie­s controlled by the Houthi rebels, the struggling Government’s main enemy during the nearly four years of warfare that has spawned the world’s worst humanitari­an crisis.

Some observers have attributed the near-famine conditions in much of the country to the coalition’s blockade of ports that supply Houthi-controlled areas. AP’s investigat­ion found that large amounts of food are making it into the country, but once there, the food often isn’t getting to people who need it most.

The United Nations’ World Food Programme has 5000 distributi­on sites across the country targeting 10 million people a month with food baskets but says it can monitor just 20 per cent of the deliveries.

Last year the UN, the United States, Saudi Arabia and others poured more than US$4 billion ($5.95b) in food, shelter, medical and other aid into Yemen. That figure is expected to keep climbing in 2019.

An analysis last month by a coalition of global relief groups found that even with the food aid that is coming in, 15.9 million of Yemen’s 29 million people aren’t getting enough to eat.

Officials with the Houthi Government did not return repeated phone calls from the AP. Officials with the coalitionb­acked Government didn’t provide answers to questions about the theft of food aid.

Geert Cappelaere, Middle East director for Unicef, the UN’s emergency fund for children, said authoritie­s on all sides of the conflict were impeding aid groups from doing their work — and increasing the risk that the country will descend into widespread famine.

“This has nothing to do with nature,” Cappelaere said. “There is no drought here in Yemen. All of this is manmade. All of this has to do with poor political leadership which doesn’t put the people’s interest at the core of their actions.”

The war in Yemen began in March 2015 after Houthi rebels swept out of the mountains

and occupied northern Yemen. In response, Saudi Arabia and other Persian Gulf states formed a coalition to take on the Houthis.

The Houthis, a Zaidi-Shia religious movement-turnedrebe­l militia, control an expanse of northern and western Yemen that is home to more than 70 per cent of the country’s population. In these areas, officials and relief workers say, Houthi rebels have moved aggressive­ly to control the flow of food aid, putting pressure on internatio­nal relief workers with threats of arrest or exile and setting up checkpoint­s that demand payments of “customs taxes” as trucks carrying aid try to move across rebel territory.

“Since the Houthis came to power, looting has been on a large scale,” said Abdullah alHamidi, who served as acting Education Minister in the Houthi-run Government in the north before defecting to the coalition side last year. “This is why the poor get nothing. What really arrives to people is very little.”

Each month in the rebelgover­ned city of Sanaa, he said, at least 15,000 food baskets that the Education Ministry was supposed to provide to hungry families were instead diverted to the black market or used to feed Houthi militiamen serving on the frontlines. Half of the food baskets that the UN food programme provides to Houthi-controlled areas are stored and distribute­d by the ministry, which is chaired by the brother of the rebels’ top leader.

Three other people familiar with relief programmes in Houthi territory confirmed that they had knowledge of food baskets being improperly diverted from the Education Ministry. They spoke on condition of anonymity because of the risk the rebels might block aid programmes or deny visas.

This has nothing to do with nature. There is no drought here in Yemen. All of this is man-made. All of this has to do with poor political leadership which doesn’t put the people’s interest at the core of their actions. Geert Cappelaere

 ??  ??
 ?? Photo / Washington Post ?? Much of the aid arriving in Yemen is not going to those who need it most.
Photo / Washington Post Much of the aid arriving in Yemen is not going to those who need it most.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand