Aid
agencies say embargo imposed by US and UK-backed Arab coalition has had
dramatic effect, with almost 80% of population in urgent need of food,
water and medical supplies
A young Yemeni poses in front of the ruins of her family house.
Photograph: Yahya Arhab/EPA Twenty million Yemenis, nearly 80% of the population, are in urgent
need of food, water and medical aid, in a humanitarian disaster that aid
agencies say has been dramatically worsened by a naval blockade imposed
by an Arab coalition with US and British backing.
Washington and London have quietly tried to persuade the Saudis, who
are leading the coalition, to moderate its tactics, and in particular to
ease the naval embargo, but to little effect. A small number of aid
ships is being allowed to unload but the bulk of commercial shipping, on
which the desperately poor country depends, are being blocked.
Despite western and UN entreaties, Riyadh has also failed to disburse
any of the $274m it promised in funding for humanitarian relief.
According to UN estimates due to be released next week 78% of the
population is in need of emergency aid, an increase of 4 million over
the past three months.
The desperate shortage of food, water and medical supplies raises
urgent questions over US and UK support for the Arab coalition’s
intervention in the Yemeni civil war since March. Washington provides logistical and intelligence support through
a joint planning cell established with the Saudi military, who are
leading the campaign. London has offered to help the Saudi military
effort in “every practical way short of engaging in combat ”.
On western urging, Riyadh had promised to move towards
“intelligence-led interdiction”, stopping and searching individual ships
on which there was good reason to believe arms were being smuggled, and
away from a blanket policy of blocking the majority of vessels
approaching Yemeni ports. But aid agencies and shipping sources say
there is little sign of any such change. UN sources say that only 15% of
the pre-crisis volume of imports is getting through, and that the
country depends on imports for nine-tenths of its food.
“There are less and less of the basic necessities. People are
queueing all day long,” said Nuha Abdul Jabber, Oxfam’s humanitarian
programme manager in the Yemeni capital, Sana’a. “The blockade means
it’s impossible to bring anything into the country. There are lots of
ships, with basic things like flour, that are not allowed to approach.
The situation is deteriorating, hospitals are now shutting down, without
diesel. People are dying of simple diseases. It is becoming almost
impossible to survive.”
In April, Saudi Arabia
pledged it would completely fund a $274m UN emergency humanitarian fund
for Yemen, but so far none of the money has been transferred to the UN
Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Riyadh is nonetheless
insisting upon the right to decide which aid workers can enter Yemen.
At Al Hudaydah on Yemen’s west coast, the only major port still
functioning, a trickle of humanitarian food supplies is arriving on a
handful of aid ships allowed through the naval blockade each week, but
many more ships are being turned away or made to wait many days to be
searched for weapons.
A
State Department official said Washington was pressing for basic goods
to be allowed through the blockade. “We continue to urge all sides,
including the Saudis, to exercise restraint and avoid unnecessary
violence,” the official said in an emailed statement. “We also urge all
parties to allow the entry and delivery of urgently needed food,
medicine, fuel and other necessary assistance through UN and
international humanitarian organisation channels to address the urgent
needs of civilians impacted by the crisis.”
Britain’s Royal Navy has liaison officers working with their Saudi
counterparts, and they have been trying to urge a more targeted,
intelligence-driven, approach to stopping a much smaller number of
ships, so far with limited effect. In London, where a pro-Saudi line has
been driven principally by Downing Street, there is growing unease over
the impact of the blockade.
A Foreign Office spokesman said the UK “urges the coalition to
quickly move to targeted naval interdictions of incoming commercial
ships”.
“The UK remains in close contact with the government of Yemen and
other international partners regarding the situation in Yemen, including
the maritime blockade. The foreign secretary discussed Yemen with the Saudi foreign minister while in Paris this week,” the spokesman said.
“We are not participating directly in military operations, but are
providing support to the Saudi Arabian armed forces through pre-existing
arrangements. A small number of UK personnel are coordinating planning
support with Saudi and coalition partners. All UK military personnel
have extensive training on International Humanitarian Law.”
The Saudi government did not respond to requests for comment.
The blockade – which is also being enforced in the air and on land –
has choked a fragile economy already staggering under the impact of a
six-month civil conflict pitting Yemeni forces loyal to the President
Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, now exiled in Riyadh, against Houthi rebels
allied to his predecessor and rival, Ali Abdullah Saleh.
A coalition led by Saudi Arabia and including Egypt ,
Jordan, Sudan and Bahrain intervened in March in support of Hadi,
viewing the Houthis as an Iranian proxy force. Iran denies accusations
of supplying arms to the insurgents, but British officials believe there
are Iranian Revolutionary Guard advisers with the Houthi rebel
leadership.
Over 2,000 Yemeni civilians are known to have been killed in the
fighting so far, and, according to new UN figures, a million have been
forced from their homes. The humanitarian crisis meanwhile, affects the
overwhelming majority of the population. Tankers carrying petrol, diesel
and fuel oil are also being stopped routinely by the naval blockade,
crippling the country’s electricity supply and forcing the mass closure
of hospitals and schools. Most urgently, it has stopped water pumps
working. Oxfam reckons the fighting and embargo have led to 3 million
Yemenis being cut off from a clean water supply since March, bringing to
16 million the total without access to drinking water or sanitation –
nearly two-thirds of the population – with dire implications for the
spread of disease.
Cooking gas is almost impossible to find. Queues to refill gas
cylinders in Sana’a now last for than a week, with people camping out by
their cylinders or chaining them down to keep their place in the queue.
There are also long lines of abandoned cars waiting for elusive
supplies of petrol.
The UN estimate that nearly 20 million Yemenis are in need of
humanitarian assistance – 78% of the entire population – represents an
increase of 4 million since the escalation of the conflict with the
Saudi intervention in March. Twelve million Yemenis are “food insecure”,
having to struggle to find their next meal, up 1.4 million since March.
Five million are described as “severely food insecure”, meaning they
often go for days without a meal.
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