Unless urgent funds are delivered, humanitarian aid meant for 8 million Yemenis will be stopped in March, United Nations officials have warned. This comes amid the biggest escalation in a long-running war that has witnessed the highest toll in civilian casualties in the last month.
U.N. special envoy Hans Grundberg and U.N. humanitarian chief Martin Griffiths painted a worsening picture of the already dire situation in the Arab world’s poorest nation. They said the past month brought a multiplication of combat zones and the end of January saw nearly two-thirds of major U.N. aid programs being scaled back or closed.
Yemen has been convulsed by civil war since 2014, when the Iran-backed Houthi rebels took control of the capital, Sanaa, and much of the country’s north, forcing the government to flee to the south, then to Saudi Arabia. A Saudi-led coalition entered the war in March 2015, backed by the U.S. and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), to try to restore President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi to power.
Grundberg warned the U.N. Security Council that recent attacks by the Houthis on the UAE and Saudi Arabia "indicate how this conflict risks spiraling out of control unless serious efforts are urgently made by the Yemeni parties, the region, and the international community to end the conflict."
He said a coalition airstrike on a detention facility in Houthi-controlled Saada "was the worst civilian casualty incident in three years," and he pointed at an "alarming" increase in airstrikes in Yemen, including on residential areas in Sanaa and the port area of Hodeida.
Griffiths said more than 650 civilians were killed or injured in January by airstrikes, shelling, small arms fire, and other violence, "by far the highest toll in at least three years."
"The war is finding people in their homes, schools, mosques, hospitals, and other places where civilians should be protected," he said. "On Jan. 21, an airstrike hit a detention facility in Saada killing or injuring more than 300 detainees. Cross-border attacks have also intensified, killing, injuring, and threatening civilians in the region."
Neither Grundberg nor Griffiths saw any signs of the conflict abating.
Grundberg said he will begin consultations next week with the warring parties, political parties, civil society, and experts on his plan to move toward a political settlement along three tracks - political, security, and economic - though the Houthis have so far refused to invite him to visit Sanaa.
He stressed that "trust is low and ending this war will require uncomfortable compromises which no warring party is currently willing to make."
"It is therefore incumbent upon all of us," Grundberg said, "including this council, to exert every possible effort to impress upon the parties to this conflict that there is no sustainable military solution."
In the midst of war, Yemen has long been viewed as the world’s worst humanitarian crisis, possibly eclipsed at the moment by Afghanistan.
But Griffiths warned that "aid agencies are quickly running out of money, forcing them to slash life-saving programs."
He said the U.N. World Food Programme (WFP) reduced food rations for 8 million people in December and starting in March "those 8 million people may get no food at all – or just a reduced ration." In March, the U.N. may also have to cancel most humanitarian flights in Yemen, he said.
Funding shortages could also deprive 3.6 million people of safe drinking water and end programs to combat gender-based violence and promote reproductive health, he said.
Griffiths called the scale of the current funding gaps in Yemen "unprecedented," saying the U.N. has never before contemplated giving millions of hungry people no food or suspending humanitarian flights.
According to the U.N. humanitarian office, the 2021 humanitarian plan for Yemen received $2.27 billion out of its $3.85 billion requirement, the lowest funding level since 2015. The 2022 plan hasn’t been released.
Griffiths announced that Sweden and Switzerland will co-host a high-level pledging event for Yemen with the U.N. on March 16.