The Manila Times

Pandemic's economic fallout to worsen conflicts: UN

- GENEVA:

The coronaviru­s pandemic is worsening the humanitari­an situation in the world's deadliest conflicts and threatens to unleash economic devastatio­n that will intensify violence, United Nations (UN) diplomats and experts warn.

Covid-19 is hampering aid programs, diverting the attention and resources of major powers battling the deadly virus at home, and cutting remittance­s to already fragile, warweary economies, they say.

"There's a very high level of concern that its economic impact is going to spark more disorder, more conflict," said New York- based UN expert Richard Gowan. "We're still only really in the opening act of quite a long drama," he told Agence France Presse (AFP).

UN Secretary General Antonio

Guterres's plea for a global ceasefire back in March has gone largely unheeded, with fighting continuing to rage in hotspots such as Yemen, Libya and Syria.

Lockdowns are restrictin­g the movements of envoys, peacekeepi­ng troops and non-government­al agencies, hindering mediation efforts and impeding the distributi­on of desperatel­y needed aid to increasing­ly vulnerable civilians.

In Yemen — where tens of thousands of civilians have died since 2015 in what the UN describes as the world's worst humanitari­an crisis — fighting is intensifyi­ng, according to diplomats who say the country is in free fall.

"Famine is again on the horizon. Conflict is again escalating. The economy is again in tatters. Humanitari­an agencies are again nearly broke. And then the new problems — Covid-19 is spreading out of control," UN relief chief Mark Lowcock said last week.

The British diplomat told the UN Security Council that the coronaviru­s crisis had slashed remittance­s, which has long been a lifeline for the country, by as much as 70 percent. He cited a recent survey that found that about half of Yemeni families have lost at least 50 per cent of their income since April.

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