Yemen, Italian Intersos Organization Discuss Mission’s Activities in Country
YemenExtra
SH.A.
Quoted from the Official Saba News Agency, the President of the National Authority for the Management and Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs and Disaster Response Dr. al-Qaseem al-Abass on Sunday met with Head of Italian Intersos organization.
The meeting discussed the activities and mechanism of work of the organization and the mechanism followed in its work during the currently phase to alleviate the acute results of the disaster left by the war waged by the US-backed Saudi-led aggression coalition on country.
The meeting dealt with the means aiming to face the humanitarian needs and overcome challenges confronting the country.
Dr. al-Qaseem reaffirmed the keenness of the authority to provide all facilities to ensure the success of the tasks of the mission of the organization, especially during the current period, which the country goes through.
The Chief of the mission of organization confirmed that Intersos will make all efforts to help to alleviate the suffering of Yemeni people.
Yemen’s humanitarian crisis is the most important story in the world, but because its victims are poor and practically invisible to the rest of the world their stories are mostly unheard and then ignored even when they are told.
Over 18,000 missile attacks on markets, hospitals and cultural centers by Riyadh and coalition partners UAE, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, Senegal and Sudan, the borders between the two belligerents remain largely unchanged.
UNHRC data indicates that at least 8 million of the nation’s 28 million people require emergency food assistance immediately, while humanitarian workers in the nation have identified areas in which people are eating leaves to survive, as an estimated 2.3 million people in the country have been driven from their homes and are now refugees.
As the Saudi-led coalition disrupts supplies of food and other necessary items, including medical equipment, through the sea, land and air blockade.