UN Says Forced to Cut Yemen Rations, Compounding Food Crisis

AFP
AFP
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UN Says Forced to Cut Yemen Rations, Compounding Food Crisis

AFP
AFP

More than four million Yemenis will receive less food assistance as a result of funding shortages, compounding one of the world's worst humanitarian crises, the UN's food agency warned Friday.

The World Food Program said "a deeper funding crisis for its Yemen operations from the end of September onward... will force WFP to make difficult decisions about further cuts to our food assistance programs across the country in the coming months."

Without new funding, it expects more than four million people will receive less food assistance, many of them women and children already suffering from some of the highest malnutrition rates in the world.

With major cuts announced across different programs, the actual number of people affected could be higher, AFP reported.

"We are confronted with the incredibly  tough reality of making decisions to take food from the hungry to feed the starving," said Richard Ragan, WFP's Yemen representative.

The UN agency was "fully cognisant of the suffering these cuts will cause", he said in a statement.

Seventeen million Yemenis are experiencing food insecurity, and one million women and 2.2 million children under five require treatment for acute malnutrition, the UN says.

For the next six months, WFP said it requires $1.05 billion in funding, only 28 percent of which has been secured.

"Yemen will remain one of WFP's largest food assistance operations, but these cuts represent a significant reduction to the agency's programs in the country," it said.

"The funding shortages are happening at a time of more people becoming severely malnourished."

The World Food Program was forced to slash food aid for 13 million Yemenis by more than 50 percent in June last year because of a funding squeeze.



Syria’s Caretaker PM: Syria Has Very Low Foreign Currency Reserves

This handout image made available by the Telegram channel of the official Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) early on December 17, 2024 shows Syria's interim Prime Minister Mohammad al-Bashir meeting with the UN Emergency Relief Coordinator in Damascus. (SANA / AFP)
This handout image made available by the Telegram channel of the official Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) early on December 17, 2024 shows Syria's interim Prime Minister Mohammad al-Bashir meeting with the UN Emergency Relief Coordinator in Damascus. (SANA / AFP)
TT

Syria’s Caretaker PM: Syria Has Very Low Foreign Currency Reserves

This handout image made available by the Telegram channel of the official Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) early on December 17, 2024 shows Syria's interim Prime Minister Mohammad al-Bashir meeting with the UN Emergency Relief Coordinator in Damascus. (SANA / AFP)
This handout image made available by the Telegram channel of the official Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) early on December 17, 2024 shows Syria's interim Prime Minister Mohammad al-Bashir meeting with the UN Emergency Relief Coordinator in Damascus. (SANA / AFP)

Syrian caretaker Prime Minister Mohammad al-Bashir told Al Jazeera TV on Tuesday that Syria has very low foreign currency reserves.

Current and former Syrian officials have told Reuters that the dollar reserves have been nearly depleted because Bashar al-Assad's government increasingly used them to fund food, fuel and its war effort.

The central bank's foreign exchange reserves amount to just around $200 million in cash, one of the sources told Reuters, while another said the US dollar reserves were "in the hundreds of millions".