Oxfam: Yemen most at risk of virus-related hunger

Oxfam: Yemen most at risk of virus-related hunger
Children of Abdullah Al-Sharaabi, a Yemeni who died of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), stand outside their home in Aden, Yemen July 1, 2020. (Reuters)
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Updated 09 July 2020
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Oxfam: Yemen most at risk of virus-related hunger

Oxfam: Yemen most at risk of virus-related hunger
  • Yemen was ranked as the country most at risk of a hunger crisis
  • The economic shock to the Gulf caused by COVID-19 and unprecedented slumps in the oil industry also had an impact on Yemen

LONDON: Yemen and Syria are among the countries most at risk of hunger crises in the aftermath of the coronavirus pandemic, according to a new Oxfam report titled “The Hunger Virus: How COVID-19 is Fuelling Hunger in a Hungry World.”

Yemen was ranked as the country most at risk of a hunger crisis, with Oxfam saying 15.9 million people, or 53 percent of the population, could face starvation.

The report cited how conflict had damaged the country’s infrastructure and its ability to both produce and import food.

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READ MORE: UN warns Yemen on brink of famine again

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The economic shock to the Gulf caused by COVID-19 and unprecedented slumps in the oil industry also had an impact on Yemen, with financial support through remittances and donations down over 80 percent from neighboring countries in the first four months of 2020, said the report. 

It added that food imports to Yemen, which was already importing 90 percent of its food before the pandemic, were down 43 percent in March and 39 percent in April.

In June, the report said, Yemen had discovered more than 900 COVID-19 cases and recorded over 250 deaths, but those figures were likely to be underestimates due to the state of the country’s health-care services.