UNITED NATIONS, Jun 29 (NNN-AGENCIES) – The number of hungry people in Yemen is the highest in seven years, with aid cuts possible in days, UN humanitarians said, yesterday.
“More than 19 million people are going hungry, including more than 160,000 on the verge of famine,” the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said. “Funding cuts are hampering our ability to help people in need.”
The office said that, the World Food Programme (WFP), reduced food rations for eight million people in Dec, due to funding gaps and had to introduce another round of cuts last month. Some five million people receive less than half of their daily requirements, and eight million will receive less than one-third of their daily needs.
More than eight million women and children need nutritional help in the country, including more than 500,000 severely malnourished children, OCHA said.
More funding cuts loom beginning Friday.
The humanitarian office said, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), reported, it might have to stop treatment next month, for more than 50,000 severely malnourished children. Also, in July, the agency will suspend its work on safe water and sanitation for up to 3.6 million people, and cut in half its mine risk education activities.
OCHA said, the trimming of child mine education puts two million children and their families at greater risk of mine-related injuries and deaths.
UNICEF also said that, in July, it would suspend maternal and child health support, which helps up to 2.5 million children and 100,000 women.
There are more than four million people internally displaced in Yemen, and are four times more likely to experience food insecurity than those not uprooted, the UN Refugee Agency said. Cash assistance, shelter and essential relief items, face slashing in July for 150,000 displaced people and nearly 100,000 refugees and asylum-seekers.– NNN-AGENCIES