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Thousands flee amid fresh violence in Yemen

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Thousands flee amid fresh violence in Yemen

UNHCR is alarmed at an upsurge in violence that has left more than 85,000 people displaced countrywide since December 2017.
9 February 2018
Yemen. Life for displaced families in a country gripped by war
Displaced Yemeni Rahaf, 8, carries her two-year-old brother, Ahmed, at the Dharawan settlement in Sana'a, Yemen, in May 2017.

AL HUDAYAH, Yemen – Fresh fighting across Yemen continues to drive people from their homes, worsening what is already the world’s largest humanitarian crisis and stretching depleted resources, UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency said today.

More than 22 million people are in need and over 85,000 displaced as a result of the ongoing conflict, as well as a collapsing economy and diminished social services.

Single mother Hayat Saif, who escaped Al Khawkah last month, described the recent upsurge in violence as the worst she had seen during the conflict.

“At some point the intensity increased so much that we just had to leave,” she said. “We were sleeping under our furniture just to try and protect ourselves. Some of the families that stayed behind are now having to hide underground.”

"Our hope is for this ugly war to end."

Yemen’s west coast continues to be the highest source of new displacement, with 71 per cent originating from Al Hudaydah and Taizz governorates. Most people remain hosted by relatives or friends, trapped inside homes or in caves as ground clashes, aerial bombardment and sniper fire rage around them.

UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, is particularly concerned for those that remain in areas close to hostilities in Taizz and Hudaydah.

“As a result of prolonged fighting in those two governorates, conditions continue to rapidly deteriorate, exposing people to violence and disease, without basic services,” UNHCR spokesperson Cécile Pouilly told journalists in Geneva.

UNHCR is also observing a spike in new displacement from other frontline areas, including Yemen’s border governorates of Al Jawf and Hajjah.

Yemen. Internally Displaced people in a camp in Amran
Sawsan, 26, fled Saada with her family.

In Hajjah, which is already host to 19 per cent of Yemen’s two million internally displaced population, ongoing flare ups have seen nearly 2,000 people flee their homes in recent weeks.

Since the beginning of the conflict, UNHCR has been providing emergency assistance and protection services to vulnerable Yemenis on the ground. More than a million displaced men, women and children affected by the conflict have been provided with core relief items such as mattresses, blankets, sleeping mats, kitchen sets and wash buckets. However, funding is stretched and slow to trickle in.

For 2018, UNHCR is appealing for nearly $200 million to respond to critical and prioritised humanitarian needs. However, the agency has started the year with just three per cent of funding available.

For Fatemah Murai and her three orphaned granddaughters, who were displaced from Nihm – a district of the capital Sana’a and a flashpoint of the conflict – UNHCR’s help has become a lifeline.

“We lost our land, home and furniture and became homeless overnight – this is the first time we received assistance since we were displaced,” she said. “Our hope is for this ugly war to end and the warring sides to leave us to live in peace.”