Yemeni children die as warring sides block aid deliveries

Yemeni children die as warring sides block aid deliveries

by Joseph Anthony
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Government soldiers ride on the back of a patrol truck

Yemeni children are dying from starvation and disease as trucks with life-saving supplies are blocked in port, leaving medical staff and desperate mothers imploring aid workers to do more, a senior UN official said.


Geert Cappelaere, Middle East director for the UN Childrenโ€™s Fund (UNICEF), described โ€œheart-breakingโ€ scenes of emaciated children in hospitals in the main port city of Hodeidah and the capital Sanaa, both held by Houthi insurgents.

โ€œWe have evidence that today in Yemen every 10 minutes a child under the age of 5 is dying from preventable diseases and severe acute malnutrition,โ€ he told Reuters from Hodeidah.

The United Nations says about 14 million people, or half Yemenโ€™s population, could soon be on the brink of famine in a man-made disaster.

Already 1.8 million Yemeni children are malnourished, more than 400,000 of them suffering from severe acute malnutrition, a life-threatening condition that leaves them skeletal with muscle wasting, Cappelaere said.

โ€œBut there is more. Many children are dying from vaccine-preventable diseases. Today not more than 40 per cent of the children throughout Yemen are being vaccinated,โ€ he said.

Measles, cholera and diphtheria can be deadly for children, especially those under five, and are exacerbated by malnutrition.

โ€œBecause of this brutal war, because of obstacles, obstructions being made, it is unfortunately not possible do much more,โ€ Cappelaere said.


โ€œWe may not yet be at the level of a famine but we should not wait until we have declared a famine to step up and to pressure the parties to the conflict to stop this senseless war,โ€ he said.

UN envoy Martin Griffiths aims to convene peace talks this month to seek a ceasefire in the three-and-half year war, which pits the Yemeni government, backed by a Saudi-led coalition, and the Iran-allied Houthi insurgents.

As Cappelaere spoke, coaltion forces were massing for an assault on Hodeidah.

โ€˜HEART-BREAKINGโ€™

Seven trucks carrying life-saving medical equipment and medicines had been blocked at Hodeidah port for two weeks awaiting clearance after being off-loaded, Cappelaere said.

โ€œIt was heartbreaking that an hour before I was sitting at al-Thwara hospital, and I have all the doctors, all the medical staff pleading with me to get more medical supplies, to get more medicines,โ€ he said.


A UNICEF spokeswoman said the trucks had been cleared by Houthi authorities on Friday and supplies would be distributed.

Several extremely malnourished children were in the hospital ward, Cappelaere said.

โ€œAll the mothers were telling me that they are simply missing that small amount of money to transport their children from their communities to the hospital,โ€ he said.

Hodeidah is a lifeline for food and other goods for much of the country.

But, said Cappelaere, โ€œThere was hardly any activity in the port. Only one ship was berthed, that was it.

โ€œToday it looks more like a graveyard than anything else.โ€

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