A United
Nations aid official visiting both sides in Yemen's civil war has urged them to
guarantee more access to the country's ports to let food, fuel and medicine
imports in to ward off a looming famine.
Emergency
relief coordinator Stephen O'Brien said the U.N. was urging international
donors to step up their aid but the Yemenis had to ensure it could reach up to
seven million people now facing severe food shortages.
Yemen has
been divided by nearly two years of civil war that pits the Iran-allied Houthi
group against a Western-backed coalition led by Saudi Arabia.
Nearly 3.3
million people in Yemen - including 2.1 million children - are acutely
malnourished, the U.N. says. They include 460,000 children under age of five
with the worst form of malnutrition, who risk dying of pneumonia or diarrhea.
Fighting in
or near ports hampers access for aid coming from outside.
"The
international community needs to step up its funding and the parties to the
conflict need to continue providing humanitarian access," O'Brien told
reporters at the government's base in Aden late on Monday.
"This
also means access to the ports so that the needed imports can enter
Yemen," he said.
Earlier this
month, the U.N. said Saudi-led coalition air strikes on the Yemeni port of
Hodeidah, which serves territory controlled by the Houthis, had hampered
humanitarian operations to import vital food and fuel supplies.
Five cranes
at the port have been destroyed, forcing dozens of ships to lie offshore
because they cannot be unloaded.
"Seven
million people don't know where their next meal is coming from and we now face
a serious risk of famine," O'Brien said.
O'Brien has
also met with the Houthi movement in the capital Sanaa. On Tuesday, he was
planning to visit the flashpoint city of Taiz but his convoy returned from its
gates because of security concerns, a U.N. source told Reuters.
Robert
Mardini, regional director at the International Committee of the Red Cross
(ICRC), voiced concern at the fate of 500,000 people in the port city of
Hodeidah as the conflict moves north up the Red Sea coast.
The
"lifeline" of aid moving through Hodeidah and other ports is starting
to be cut, Mardini told reporters in Geneva. "In terms of reserves, there
are reserves for two, three or four months, I don't know. But there is an
urgent need for re-supply, this is what we can say."
U.N. has
appealed for $2.1 billion to provide food and other life-saving aid, saying
that Yemen's economy and institutions are collapsing and its infrastructure has
been devastated.
U.N.
Secretary General Antonio Guterres said last week only $90 million of funding
has been received so far, out of $5.6 billion needed this year for humanitarian
operations in Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan and Yemen.
(Reuters)
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