The National - News

Peace is Yemen’s only path to avoiding catastroph­e

- JAMES CLEVERLY

On April 27, Abdulaziz Al Qadhi, a local furniture store owner from Al Mansourah in Aden Governorat­e, became Yemen’s first officially recorded coronaviru­s fatality. A day later, his brother Ahmed fell victim to Covid-19, too. In the weeks since, many Yemenis have lost loved ones to this deadly virus. Across Yemen, the spread of the infection is likely to be far higher than official data suggests. Sadly, this is just the beginning.

Yemen is of course not alone in its exposure to this global pandemic, but in Yemen Covid-19 is menacing a country already devastated by five years of war, hunger and disease. Over the coming months, many more Yemenis will die from coronaviru­s – be it from the virus itself or its impact on the already fragile economy and health sector.

How Yemen’s leaders respond to this threat will determine how many more Yemenis lose their lives.

There is an opportunit­y for positive action. But it is deeply concerning that some of Yemen’s leaders have shirked their responsibi­lities and sought to use the crisis to serve their own narrow agendas. We have heard reports of the Houthis blaming migrants for the outbreak and stopping coronaviru­s cases from being recorded. We must see through this smokescree­n.

Across the country, needless restrictio­ns on the internatio­nal humanitari­an response are preventing aid from getting to those that need it most. The UN, the WHO and internatio­nal NGOs are doing all they can to save Yemeni lives. We have provided £810 million in UK aid to provide food, water and sanitation since the conflict began.

But these humanitari­an organisati­ons can only do what Yemen’s leaders allow them to. In Houthi-controlled areas, these restrictio­ns are so severe that they are preventing the delivery of aid to millions of people in need, meaning some donors have had no choice but to suspend their funding at the time when Yemen needs aid most. I call on Yemen’s leaders to immediatel­y facilitate humanitari­an access and operations to help us win the fight against coronaviru­s.

Ultimately, the biggest impediment to the fight against the coronaviru­s remains Yemen’s horrific conflict. In this respect, the recent Houthi aggression towards Marib and the conflict in the south are especially concerning. The Southern Transition­al Council’s self-rule declaratio­n and latest campaign of violence only complicate UN efforts to tackle the coronaviru­s outbreak and reverse progress towards ending this war.

On March 25, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres – backed by the UK and all permanent members of the UN Security Council – called for a nationwide ceasefire in Yemen. This statement was welcomed unconditio­nally by all parties and, on April 9, Saudi Arabia took the decision to announce a unilateral ceasefire in Yemen and to limit its military activities to purely defensive operations. In spite of the determined efforts by the UN’s special envoy, Martin Griffiths, the Yemeni parties have not yet agreed to UN proposals for a nationwide ceasefire, humanitari­an and economic measures and a political process that can end this grim conflict.

The UN’s proposals are Yemen’s best hope of peace and of limiting the destructio­n of the coronaviru­s pandemic. The decision to do so now rests in the hands of Yemen’s leaders. I encourage them to take the courageous steps needed to accelerate their engagement with the UN on Mr Griffiths’s proposals and to agree urgently a nationwide ceasefire to spare Yemeni lives from coronaviru­s. Political games, aggressive statements and provocativ­e social media have no place.

Yemen was already one of the world’s most desperate humanitari­an disasters. Under the shadow of coronaviru­s, it now faces a tragedy of unimaginab­le scale.

For the sake of all Yemenis, Yemen’s leaders must now park their difference­s and agree upon a political solution to fight coronaviru­s and provide a pathway out of this wretched conflict. This needs to include urgent steps to: facilitate humanitari­an access; free political prisoners, including detained British national Luke Symons; reach agreement on a nationwide ceasefire and build humanitari­an and economic confidence. These responsibl­e actions are within their power.

It is the time to act. Actions, not words, are how the Yemeni people – and indeed the world – will judge their leaders. Millions of lives depend on it.

There are reports of the Houthis blaming migrants for the outbreak and stopping Covid-19 cases being recorded

James Cleverly is the UK Minister of State for the Middle East and North Africa

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