Yemen: $ 150 million from the World Bank for the humanitarian crisis

THE The World Bank announced yesterday, Wednesday 30 June, that it has decided to provide $ 150 million in aid to the war Yemen, to facilitate the population ‘s access to basic health services, food, water and sanitation infrastructure.

The armed conflict in Yemen, which erupted in 2014 when Shiite Houthi rebels stormed their forts in the north and took the capital Sanaa, has caused what the UN calls the worst humanitarian catastrophe in the world.

According to World Bank calculations, the number of deaths had reached 233,000 at the end of last year, with “about half are caused by lack of food or access to medical care, as well as the lack of basic infrastructure to provide services “.

About 80% of Yemenis depend on humanitarian aid to survive.

“Out of a total population of 29 million, about 20 million Yemenis are in a state of food insecurity and at risk of malnutrition, while two-thirds do not have the means to obtain sufficient food, water or access to health care. “More than four million people have fled their homes,” the World Bank said in a press release issued by APE-MPE.

The funds raised by the Washington Financial Institution are planned to be used to provide medical care and food to 3.65 million Yemenis, water and sanitation to 850,000 others, and to train about 3,000 members of public health services.

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