ADEN: Yemen’s government accused its Houthi foes of covering up a big outbreak of coronavirus in areas they hold and the United Nations warned that the country could suffer a “catastrophic” food security situation due to the pandemic.
The Aden-based government also called for urgent global assistance to help Yemen’s war-ravaged health sector deal with the coronavirus.
The World Health Organization (WHO) says the virus is spreading undetected among the population in the country, divided between the government in the south and the Iran-aligned Houthi militia based in the north.
The conflict between the Arab coalition, which includes Saudi Arabia. and the Houthis has already caused what the United Nations describes as the world’s largest humanitarian crisis, with about 80 percent of Yemen’s population reliant on aid and millions facing hunger.
The government has reported 128 infections and 20 deaths linked to the coronavirus across nine of Yemen’s 21 provinces. The Houthis, who hold most large population centers, have only announced four cases with one death, all in the capital Sanaa.
“Reports on the ground indicate a large number of coronavirus cases in areas under the Houthis’ control and hiding this information is completely unacceptable,” Minister of Local Administration Abdul Raqib Fath told a news conference on Sunday.
He urged the WHO and the international community to pressure the Houthis about declaring cases.
The Houthi movement, which ousted the internationally recognized government from Sanaa in late 2014, denies the charges. On Saturday, its health minister announced two more infections and said the ministry was following all suspected cases, without providing a number.
The WHO says it has been advising local authorities throughout Yemen, where testing capacity is limited, to report cases in order to secure resources, but that the decision to do so rests with a country’s leaders.
Sources had told Reuters that both sides have not fully disclosed the extent of the pandemic in a country already plagued by other diseases.
The Aden-based government’s health minister said Yemen urgently needed financial assistance and protective gear for health workers in addition to ventilators, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and swab test equipment.
The United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) said on Monday hunger could spread drastically due to the coronavirus pandemic.
“That situation could be really catastrophic if all the elements of worst case scenarios come to be but let’s hope not and the UN are working on avoiding that,” senior FAO regional official Abdessalam Ould Ahmed told Reuters.
The United States said on May 6 it would provide $225 million to the World Food Programme (WFP) for Yemen, including for reduced operations in the north.
The WFP had said it would halve aid in Houthi-held areas from mid-April over donor concerns that the group is hindering aid deliveries, a charge it denies.
The UN envoy to Yemen said on Thursday that significant progress has been made toward cementing a temporary truce prompted by the coronavirus pandemic and to pave the way for a resumption of stalled peace talks.
Yemen's government accuses Houthis of covering up coronavirus outbreak
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Yemen's government accuses Houthis of covering up coronavirus outbreak
- The government has reported 128 infections and 20 deaths linked to the coronavirus across nine of Yemen’s 21 provinces
Israel uses cargo ships to repatriate doctors stranded abroad by war
A ZIM official told Reuters on Tuesday that its cargo ships were shuttling between Limassol and Haifa
More shuttles are planned this week to repatriate what could be hundreds of doctors
JERUSALEM: Israeli authorities are using container ships to bring back dozens of essential medical staff stuck abroad after the air war with Iran broke out on Saturday, disrupting travel, according to Israel’s cargo firm ZIM Shipping.
A ZIM official told Reuters on Tuesday that its cargo ships were shuttling between Limassol in Cyprus and the Israeli port of Haifa, in an operation coordinated between the Transportation Ministry, major Israeli hospitals and the company.
So far, 40 doctors have returned in two sailings — including one on Tuesday — and more shuttles are planned this week to repatriate what could be hundreds of doctors, to deal with Israelis injured by Iranian missiles.
“It’s the easiest way to get them home when there are no flights,” said the official, who asked not to be named.
The doctors were away either at conventions or on holidays and now sought to “go back as fast as possible to their jobs in case of emergencies,” he added.
ZIM was re-routing ships from usual shipping routes between Israel and Mediterranean ports such as in Greece and Italy, and making makeshift arrangements on the cargo vessels to keep the doctors safe and comfortable during the 15-hour voyage from Cyprus. Israel and the US began bombing Iran on Saturday, triggering a wave of retaliatory strikes across the Middle East that have led to flight chaos, with hundreds of thousands of passengers stranded worldwide due to the closure of airspaces.
US and Israeli officials said the campaign could last weeks.
Israeli airlines have begun repatriation flights via Taba in Egypt, which borders the Red Sea resort city of Eilat in southern Israel. However, passengers must then travel north to major cities, which takes hours by car or bus.
“This (cargo ship option) is far more efficient and easy,” the official said.
More shuttles are planned this week to repatriate what could be hundreds of doctors
JERUSALEM: Israeli authorities are using container ships to bring back dozens of essential medical staff stuck abroad after the air war with Iran broke out on Saturday, disrupting travel, according to Israel’s cargo firm ZIM Shipping.
A ZIM official told Reuters on Tuesday that its cargo ships were shuttling between Limassol in Cyprus and the Israeli port of Haifa, in an operation coordinated between the Transportation Ministry, major Israeli hospitals and the company.
So far, 40 doctors have returned in two sailings — including one on Tuesday — and more shuttles are planned this week to repatriate what could be hundreds of doctors, to deal with Israelis injured by Iranian missiles.
“It’s the easiest way to get them home when there are no flights,” said the official, who asked not to be named.
The doctors were away either at conventions or on holidays and now sought to “go back as fast as possible to their jobs in case of emergencies,” he added.
ZIM was re-routing ships from usual shipping routes between Israel and Mediterranean ports such as in Greece and Italy, and making makeshift arrangements on the cargo vessels to keep the doctors safe and comfortable during the 15-hour voyage from Cyprus. Israel and the US began bombing Iran on Saturday, triggering a wave of retaliatory strikes across the Middle East that have led to flight chaos, with hundreds of thousands of passengers stranded worldwide due to the closure of airspaces.
US and Israeli officials said the campaign could last weeks.
Israeli airlines have begun repatriation flights via Taba in Egypt, which borders the Red Sea resort city of Eilat in southern Israel. However, passengers must then travel north to major cities, which takes hours by car or bus.
“This (cargo ship option) is far more efficient and easy,” the official said.
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