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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, May 4, 2015
In Yemen, Trying to Save People Without Selling Out
Yemenis desperately need hundreds of
millions of dollars in humanitarian aid being offered by Saudi Arabia.
But relief workers are wary of taking the money while Saudi airstrikes
continue.

Humanitarian aid groups that have been a lifeline to millions of
desperate people in Yemen are considering rejecting a $274 million
donation from Saudi Arabia as long as Riyadh continues bombing Houthi
rebels in the Mideast’s newest war.
The conflict — which is widely seen as a proxy war between Saudi Arabia
and Iran — presents an ethical dilemma for aid workers who need the
funds to help hungry, sick, and homeless civilians in Yemen but are wary
of appearing complicit in the devastating air campaign that is believed
to have killed more than 1,000 people.
The Saudi Arabian donation may be unprecedented in its scope: It is
believed the first time in recent memory that a single nation has paid
100 percent of a so-called “flash appeal” emergency fund that is
managed by the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
Flash appeals are usually funded by multiple donors.
One Western aid worker, who was recently evacuated from Sanaa and spoke
to Foreign Policy on condition of not being identified, called the Saudi
donation “guilt money” for moving ahead with its bombing campaign
instead of aggressively pushing for a cease-fire. Another aid worker
from a different organization urged colleagues to “avoid [having] the
KSA fund the humanitarian response in Yemen,” according to e-mails
obtained by FP that were sent to at least eight relief agencies,
including the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red
Crescent, CARE International, Oxfam, and Save The Children.
KSA stands for the kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Its embassy in Washington declined comment for this story.
The dilemma is nearing a decision point: Aid groups will have to decide
in the next few weeks whether to accept the Saudi donation, which was
given to the United Nations humanitarian affairs office to be parceled
out to relief organizations. Top officials with U.N. and Red Cross
humanitarian aid missions will meet May 13 with international relief
groups to discuss the Yemen funding appeal.
At least one major aid organization — which declined to be identified
until a decision is reached — is leaning against taking the money, and
others are wrestling with whether they should also reject it, according
to emails and interviews with a half-dozen humanitarian workers and
advocacy missions. Nearly all spoke to FP on condition of anonymity as
their organizations consider whether a perceived stigma of allying with
Riyadh outweighs the urgent need of ministering to the war’s civilian
victims.
“It is an uncomfortable situation,” said Joel R. Charny, vice president
for humanitarian policy at InterAction, a Washington-based alliance for
aid and advocacy organizations worldwide. “Of course it raises questions
as to whether this is a way [for Riyadh] to wash [its] hands or
distract attention from the humanitarian impact of the war to date.
There’s bound to be a little bit of discomfort, I think, given the fact
the entire pool of money is coming from a single donor that’s a
belligerent.”
The U.N. will keep the money available for other aid organizations that will try to distribute it in Yemen.
InterAction represents about 10 aid groups that have been working in
Yemen, including Oxfam and International Medical Corps, which suffered employee injuries or damage to warehouses storing
medicine, food and other relief supplies in mid-April airstrikes they
believe were ordered by Riyadh. Charny said most, if not all, aid groups
have pulled their international staff from Yemen, leaving the daunting
mission to local workers.
Yemen is one of the poorest countries in the world, and one of every five of its people is undernourished,
according to the U.N. Humanitarian aid missions in Yemen for years have
been severely underfunded, and had by late March collected only 8
percent of an emergency fund appeal by the time Saudi airstrikes began, according to the U.N.
As many as 16 million Yemenis were reliant on international aid before
the war began, and up to 12 million are in immediate danger of going
hungry, according to a senior Western aid worker who recently left
Yemen. And if fuel cannot be shipped into the country within two weeks,
he said, it’s likely that many relief efforts will shut down.
The U.N. has demanded a cease-fire in Yemen, and the U.S. has called for apolitical solution to
the unrest, although Washington supports a Saudi-led coalition of Arab
states determined to shut down the Shiite Houthi rebels. Riyadh shows
little sign of stopping: Human Rights Watch on Sundayreported evidence of banned cluster munitions being used in airstrikes along the Saudi border in mid-April.
Cluster munitions are banned by the U.N. and 91 countries — but not the
U.S., Saudi Arabia, or most of the Mideast — because they are imprecise
weapons that leave unexploded but still operational bombs in conflict
areas that can be picked up or otherwise detonated by civilians. The
Human Rights Watch findings put new pressure on the U.N. and the
International Committee of the Red Cross, which generally accept donor
funds from belligerent nations so long as efforts are made to protect
civilians and make sure they are not confused with combatants.
On April 17 — a week before Riyadh pledged to wind down its bombing campaign but continued to attack — Saudi King Salman donated the
full amount of a new, three month $274 million U.N. appeal for a
Yemen-focused program that aid groups had helped design. It followed
more than $850 million Riyadh has given to refugee, emergency health,
and other humanitarian crises in the Mideast and West Africa since last
July.
“The significance of this money cannot be underplayed,” said Kieran
Dwyer, spokesman for the U.N. Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs. He called the situation in Yemen “desperate and
getting worse.”
“All humanitarian organizations are committed to delivering life saving
aid, but to do this they need resources,” Dwyer said. “And resources for
Yemen at this scale are very, very difficult to get from alternative
sources.”
Dwyer also said the Saudi government has put no conditions on how the
funds are spent or who they will go to help. Charny called that “very
rare in this day and age of emergencies” and said that should ease the
aid groups’ concerns they are talking sides, in the war, which would
cast doubt on their neutrality.
The U.N. and world powers like the U.S. have long pressured nations in
the Mideast to take the lead in helping victims of war in their own
region, often to little or no effect. “So you can look at this and say,
‘Wait a second, from a Saudi perspective, they’re stepping up; they’re
doing exactly what we’re asking them to do,’” Charny said.
But aid groups that have been working in Yemen say there’s little point
in accepting the funding if it cannot get to the people who need it
most.
A Saudi airstrike last week hit an airport runway in Sanaa, blocking aid
planes from landing. Riyadh said it was trying to stop an Iranian plane
suspected of carrying assistance to Houthi rebels. Most of Yemen’s main
seaports also have been shut down, either by the Houthi-controlled government in Sanaa or in what Charny called a Saudi blockade to further cut off the Shiite rebels from Tehran’s assistance. Saudi officials, meanwhile,say it’s the continued attacks by Houthis that are preventing aid from reaching civilians in Yemen.
One senior Western aid worker who was forced to flee Sanaa for safety
said Yemen depends on 350,000 tons of food each month and 144,000
barrels of oil daily to keep its people fed and hospitals,
transportation, and other vital infrastructure up and running. That aid
is “stuck outside Yemen at the moment,” he said.
And the few local relief workers who are still in the country find it
increasingly dangerous to distribute what aid is available due to the
ongoing violence.
Airstrikes last month that hit relief agencies’ warehouses has further
spooked aid workers who fear they will become the war’s next victims.
Those airstrikes were widely believed to be ordered by the Saudi government.
The State Department is working with Saudi officials to “ensure safe
conduct of humanitarian operations” in Yemen, said spokesman Daniel
Langenkamp, and a USAID adviser is in Riyadh to help guide coordination
with aid agencies in battle zones to avoid similar strikes going
forward.
On Friday, White House counterterror czar Lisa Monaco met with new U.N. Special Envoy to Yemen Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed to discuss how to speed access and delivery of “badly needed food, medicine, and other supplies to the people of Yemen who are suffering.”
But that is of little assurance, and no comfort, to the relief organizations.
“With all the bombing going on, how will we be able to spend that money
if you can’t actually get access?” said the senior Western aid worker,
who remains in the Mideast and refused to be identified, in part for
fear of the safety of his local staff still in Yemen.
His organization is leaning against accepting the Saudi donation, especially as the bombing campaign continues.
“It’s guilt money,” the worker said, and “it doesn’t seem like they’re feeling all that guilty.”
MOHAMMED HUWAIS/AFP/Getty Images

