Donors pledge $1.1 billion

U.N.: Ending conflict in Yemen only way to save lives

GENEVA -- International donors have pledged $1.1 billion for war-torn Yemen, the United Nations secretary-general said Tuesday, appealing to the fighting sides to grant access to humanitarian aid and revive diplomatic efforts to end a conflict that has killed more than 10,000 civilians.

Antonio Guterres ended a daylong Yemen aid conference by hailing the "clear generosity and solidarity" of governments and nongovernmental groups after two years of intensified conflict in the Arab world's poorest country.

The conference, co-sponsored by the U.N., Switzerland and Sweden, raised pledges for over half of the $2.1 billion sought by the U.N. this year in an appeal that was only 15 percent funded previously.

After years of shortfall in funding for Yemen, Guterres praised a "very encouraging signal" that the target could be met this year. He said the pledges must now be "translated into effective support" for Yemenis.

"We basically need now three things: access, access, access" for humanitarian groups to reach all Yemenis in need, he said.

Humanitarian crisis

The war has pushed Yemen to the brink of famine, obliterated the health system, led to broad human-rights violations and impeded imports of crucial food, resources and medicines.

Aid groups want improved access to civilians, a halt to deadly airstrikes by a Saudi-led, U.S.-supported coalition that has been fighting Shiite rebels known as Houthis, and more respect for international law.

U.N. officials say the world's largest humanitarian crisis is in Yemen, where 17 million people are classified as lacking adequate food, with 7 million of those facing critical food shortages.

The war pits the coalition of mostly Sunni Arab countries against the Iran-backed Houthis and allied army units loyal to a former president. The Houthis seized the capital, Sanaa, and other areas in 2014, forcing the internationally recognized government to flee.

Unlike the Syrian war, Yemen's conflict has not produced a flood of refugees -- making it a relatively contained crisis that has made fewer international headlines.

Violence and administrative blockages have impeded the flow of aid and resources into the country.

A preliminary breakdown provided by the U.N. showed that the United Kingdom pledged more than $173 million; Saudi Arabia pledged $150 million; and the United Arab Emirates, a key member of the coalition, pledged $100 million.

The United States said it was committing nearly $94 million in additional assistance, raising its total to $526 million since fiscal 2016.

Guterres and many diplomats acknowledged aid is only a stopgap measure, insisting that ultimately Yemen's suffering will ease only with a political solution that ends the war.

"On average, a child under the age of 5 dies of preventable causes in Yemen every 10 minutes," Guterres said at the conference opening. "This means 50 children in Yemen will die during today's conference, and all of those deaths could have been prevented."

"We are witnessing the starving and the crippling of an entire generation," he added. "We must act now to save lives."

The United Nations' humanitarian aid coordination agency says some 18.8 million people need humanitarian or protection assistance in Yemen.

By contrast, the U.N. refugee agency says war-depleted Syria has some 13.5 million people in need.

"In simple terms, the situation in Yemen is catastrophic," said Geert Cappelaere, UNICEF's director for the Mideast and North Africa. "There is no single country in the world where, today, children are more suffering than in Yemen."

vital port threatened

The conflict threatens to endanger access to the Hodeida port on the Red Sea, a vital lifeline for most of Yemen's population. U.N. officials say a feared Saudi-led attack on the port would displace up to 500,000 people and require additional humanitarian aid of up to $85 million.

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Gennady Gatilov expressed concerns about "worrying rumors of an assault on Hodeida," and called for an "immediate lifting" of the Saudi-led sea and land blockade.

Speaking in Beirut, Cappelaere said UNICEF and other aid groups have called on all parties to keep the port and other entry points, such as the Sanaa airport, open on a daily basis to bring in much-needed supplies.

Less than 45 percent of health facilities are now fully functioning, and the flow of "essential medicines" has fallen by nearly 70 percent, said World Health Organization Director-General Margaret Chan.

"Health needs go well beyond the prevention of outbreaks," she said in a statement. "Conditions like diabetes, high blood pressure and cancer are killing more people than bullets and bombs."

Information for this article was contributed by Sarah El Deeb and Ahmed al-Haj of The Associated Press.

A Section on 04/26/2017

Upcoming Events