Breaking Headline

Over 500,000 Yemenis flee conflict

Published May 20th, 2015 - 05:30 GMT
Al Bawaba
Al Bawaba

The United Nations (UN) says more than half a million people in Yemen have been displaced since Saudi Arabia began its military operation in the country late March.

A spokesman for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), Adrian Edwards, told journalists in Geneva that an estimated 545,000 people have been displaced, up from 450,000 announced on Friday.

The UN official said the agency’s assessments on the ground during the five-day ‘ceasefire’ had “exposed enormous difficulties for thousands of civilians displaced by conflict.”

Teams found traumatized populations – afraid, upset and struggling to meet basic needs,” Edwards said.

Citing Yemen’s health services, the UN has said that, as of May 15, some 1,850 people were killed and 7,394 wounded in the violence in Yemen.

The World Food Program has also complained that the ‘ceasefire’ was “not long enough to reach all those in need” and that it had only managed to deliver food to about half of the 738,000 it had aimed to help.

The Saudis continued bombing Yemen early Monday with air raids on the city of Aden.

Meanwhile, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has appealed to “all parties to create the conditions leading to a permanent ceasefire.”

The ceasefire had enabled the UNHCR and other humanitarian organizations to conduct rapid protection assessments and to supply petrol and food in 40 districts across 11 provinces of Yemen.

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