WFP Chief appeals for peace as Yemen teeters on edge of famine

WFP

Mr. David Beasley Executive Director, World Food Programme visited the Al Sabeen Maternity and Children Hospital which is a public referral hospital and hosts a Community-Based Management of Acute Malnutrition (CMAM) prgoramme supported by WFP and UNICEF." title="Photo: WFP/Mohammed Awadh, Yemen, Al Sabeen district, 9 March 2021 Mr. David Beasley Executive Director, World Food Programme visited the Al Sabeen Maternity and Children Hospital which is a public referral hospital and hosts a Community-Based Management of Acute Malnutrition (CMAM) prgoramme supported by WFP and UNICEF.">

Photo: WFP/Mohammed Awadh, Yemen, Al Sabeen district, 9 March 2021 Mr. David Beasley Executive Director, World Food Programme visited the Al Sabeen Maternity and Children Hospital which is a public referral hospital and hosts a Community-Based Management of Acute Malnutrition (CMAM) prgoramme supported by WFP and UNICEF.
ADEN/SANA'A - The Executive Director of the UN World Food Programme issued an urgent plea for peace in Yemen and called for funding to help the most vulnerable hungry families as he wrapped up a two-day visit to the country where the worst famine the world has seen in modern history is now looming.

"Over half of the people in Yemen are facing acute food shortages with millions knocking on the door of famine. These are not just numbers. They are real people and it is heartbreaking," said David Beasley. "Famine-like conditions are emerging across Yemen and the answer is simple. We have a vaccine for this. It is called food. All we need to save lives is funding."

In Sana'a, Beasley visited a hospital and witnessed first-hand the devastating toll that malnutrition is having on Yemen's children. Half of all children under five in Yemen - 2.3 million - are projected to face acute malnutrition this year, with nearly 400,000 suffering from severe acute malnutrition and likely to die if they do not get urgent treatment.

"In the children's wing of any hospital in the world, you usually hear crying or laughter but in these hospitals in Yemen, there is dead silence as the children are too sick and too weak to either cry or laugh. But they are still the lucky ones who were able to make it to the hospital," Beasley added. "Many poor families cannot afford the cost of transportation to bring their children to hospitals or they arrive and are turned away because there are not enough beds for their sick children."

The WFP chief also met 2-year-old Sultan, a little boy treated by WFP for malnutrition, who came for a check-up.

"Meeting Sultan shows me what WFP can do. We can make a difference here, but we need the funds to do it - and these children need to be given a chance to grow up in a country at peace," said Beasley.

Beasley also saw the progress of WFP's biometric registration programme, making sure food assistance is delivered in an accountable and transparent way.

Right now, humanitarian food assistance is the first line defence against spiralling hunger in Yemen, where over 16 million people are food insecure. Nearly 50,000 people are already facing famine-like conditions (IPC 5) and a further 5 million people are only one step away (IPC 4).

WFP is looking at all options to scale up assistance to meet the growing needs and avert a devastating famine. WFP is already prioritising monthly assistance to 11 districts with populations in famine-like conditions in a bid to save lives and prevent further decline. But more needs to be done for millions who are at risk of slipping further into hunger as conflict and displacement, crippling fuel shortages, and rising food prices makes life harder each day.

Fourteen vessels carrying fuel are currently being held off Yemen's Red Sea coast unable to berth. None have entered Al Hodeidah port since 3 January 2021. With fuel reserves nearing empty, hospitals have been left without power and the commercial sector struggling to transport food and basic goods. This is forcing people to turn to the black market where prices are up to three times higher than the official rate, all contributing to food prices that are climbing well out of reach for millions.

"This is hell. Absolutely horrendous. Yemen is becoming the worst place on earth and it is totally man made," said Beasley.

As the world marked International Woman's Day on 8 March, the WFP chief visited a WFP-run kitchen in the southern city of Aden which employs local women - many of them displaced by conflict, others their families' sole breadwinner - to make packed lunches for schoolchildren. He then visited a school to distribute the lunches to children.

"When we empower women and girls, we take a step towards zero hunger," said Beasley. "But we need Yemen's war to end so these brave and ambitious girls can grow up to be the doctors, pilots and teachers they want to be."

WFP's operation remains critically underfunded and the agency's ability to maintain this level of response hangs in the balance. Only with predictable and sustained funding can WFP define a realistic implementation plan that meets the needs of the most vulnerable - and avert a devastating famine. WFP needs US$1.9 billion to save lives and provide food assistance in 2021.

"Food assistance saves lives," said Beasley. "But it does not solve the problems that caused Yemen's crisis, nor the underlying drivers of food insecurity. Only with a lasting solution will it be possible to reinvigorate the economy, stabilise the currency, ensure the free flow of basic goods and fuel through Yemen's ports, and start paying public salaries, allowing people to have the money required to buy food and rebuild their lives."

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