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  Local
Sa'ada Upgrading Yemen Group for Agricultural Development announces distribution of dividends to shareholders
[18 April 2024]
Sana'a Governor inspects progress of work in Johana
[18 April 2024]
Discussing procedures to reduce flood damage and confront watery diarrhea in Al Dhalea
[18 April 2024]
SANA'A.. holiday convoy for Almoravids on front lines from Women’s Development Administration in Hamadan
[18 April 2024]
Sana'a.. 50,000 visitors to tourism sites, dams on first & second days of Eid
[18 April 2024]
 
  International
Gaza needs surgical field hospitals with operating rooms & intensive care
[18 April 2024]
European Council reaffirms its commitment to reach ceasefire in Gaza
[18 April 2024]
Russia comments on "French sovereignty" after Paris transfers an aircraft carrier to NATO command
[18 April 2024]
Kenya: Army chief and nine officers killed in helicopter crash in west
[18 April 2024]
Guterres warns of risk of all-out regional conflict in Middle East
[18 April 2024]
 
  Reports
Sana'a.. 50,000 visitors to tourism sites, dams on first & second days of Eid
[18 April 2024]
Al-Zanna area & Al-Amal neighborhood ambush. Evidence of Palestinian resistance ability to surprise & strike enemy
[18 April 2024]
Unique Eid atmosphere in Hajjah
[18 April 2024]
Yemen's pro-Palestine position is at forefront of Free participants discussion in Palestine Conference in capital, Sana'a
[17 April 2024]
Eid visits to fronts embody popular alignment with army to defend nation
[17 April 2024]
 
  US-Saudi Aggression
American-British aggression launch three raids on Hajjah
[15 March 2024]
American-British aggression launch 12 raids on Hodeida
[11 March 2024]
American-British aggression hits farm in Hodeida
[20 February 2024]
Four citizens injured by explosion of leftover military ordnance in Marib
[19 February 2024]
9 raids of US-British aggression on governorates of Sana'a and Hajjah
[04 February 2024]
  International
From south to north .. No to starvation and occupation in Yemen
From south to north .. No to starvation and occupation in Yemen
From south to north .. No to starvation and occupation in Yemen
[16/October/2018]



SANAA, Oct. 16 (Saba) – Before the embargo, Yemen was suffering from the world's worst humanitarian crisis, according to the United Nations, with 7 million people on the brink of famine and another 900,000 stricken by cholera. Those conditions have now grown far worse — and yet the Saudis persist with their siege.

Yemen's 28 million people depend on imports for up to 90 percent of their basic needs, including food, fuel and medicine.

The vast majority of those imports come through the port of Hodeida, in northern Yemen, which along with the capital, Sanaa, is under the control of Houthi.

U.N. humanitarian officials warned that the shutdown would quickly lead to an emergency.

Now their predictions are coming true. According to the International Committee of the Red Cross, Sanaa, Hodeida and three other crowded cities — with 2.5 million people in all — have lost access to clean drinking water because of a lack of fuel.

Several provinces are down to a five-day supply of the fuel needed to operate flour mills, without which the millions dependent on food handouts will starve.

Craig said, “There has been a long history of political assassinations in the country going way back, even preceding Ali Abdullah Saleh’s time in politics.

It’s hard to overstate how badly Saleh robbed Yemen. Some estimates say he personally stole $60 billion during his 33-year rule, much of it U.S. cash meant to help fight al-Qaeda.

The figures of the crisis are staggering and near-impossible to grasp: 22.2 million in need of assistance, 8.4 million people severely food insecure, and a further 10 million that could fall under the same category by the end of the year.“It is bleak”, UN humanitarian chief Mark Lowcock told the Security Council “We are losing the fight against famine.

Hundreds of thousands of families no longer have a regular source of income – including teachers, health workers, water and sanitation workers and other public servants, they have not been paid a regular salary in two years.

Currently, over 150 relief organizations, including eight UN agencies, are working around the clock to provide food, shelter, nutritional assistance, protection services and much more to millions of Yemenis whose lives have been uprooted by the conflict.

However, the needs continue to outpace the response capacity and humanitarian workers face critical challenges every day.



Mona Zaid

Saba


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UPDATED ON :Thu, 18 Apr 2024 23:06:55 +0300