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Yemen seeks greater humanitarian intervention from international community

Yemen seeks greater humanitarian intervention from international community
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Marib deputy governor Abd-Rabbu Miftah meets UNICEF’s representative in Yemen, Philippe Duamelle to discuss partnerships. (Saba)
Yemen seeks greater humanitarian intervention from international community
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Minister Planning and International Cooperation Wa’id Badhib called on the World Bank to help develop private-owned businesses Yemen. (Saba)
Yemen seeks greater humanitarian intervention from international community
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Prime Minister Ma’een Abdulmalik held talks with with a delegation from the Hello Trust Organization about de-mining projects in Yemen. (Saba)
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Updated 19 October 2022

Yemen seeks greater humanitarian intervention from international community

Yemen seeks greater humanitarian intervention from international community
  • Miftah aims to meet health, education, water, and childhood protection needs of those living in Marib
  • Abdulmalik called on the international community to condemn and act against the Houthi militia’s excessive use of landmines

DUBAI: Yemen’s Marib deputy governor Abd-Rabbu Miftah has asked UNICEF to support efforts by local authorities to respond to the growing needs of internally displaced people (IDP) in the country. 
Miftah made the requests during talks held on Tuesday with UNICEF’s representative in Yemen, Philippe Duamelle, who is on an official visit in Marib, reported state agency Saba. 
Duamelle is in the Yemeni governorate to broaden partnerships with local bodies and get first-hand information on the current humanitarian situation in the war-torn city. 
Miftah aims to meet health, education, water, and childhood protection needs of those living in Marib with the help and support of UNICEF. 
He also expressed his appreciation for the UN organization’s significant humanitarian intervention in the governorate. 
Duamelle praised the robust partnership with Marib local authority and its understanding of the growing needs of IDPs who continue to arrive in the city daily. 
Meanwhile, Prime Minister Ma’een Abdulmalik reiterated the government’s keenness to establish regional and international collaborations with local demining programs during a meeting in Aden. 
During the talks held with a delegation from the Hello Trust Organization, Abdulmalik called on the international community to condemn and act against the Houthi militia’s excessive use of landmines, which violates international law. 
Program director Calvin Ricin, and director of the organization's program in Yemen Abdullah al-Khasawina, also discussed demining projects focused on clearing the country from mine planted by Houthis. 
Yemen’s Minister Planning and International Cooperation Wa’id Badhib also called on the World Bank (WB) to increase aid as part of further efforts to support the country’s ongoing crisis. 
Badhib, who made the appeal during a meeting with WB’s President David Malpass and governors of Arab Central Banks at the World Bank’s headquarters in Washington. 
He called on the international financial institution to handle ‘grassroots of food insecurity, energy and promote investment in the infrastructure,’ state news agency Saba reported. 
Badhib welcomed the WB’s decisions to re-establish its presence in Aden, and urged the entity to help develop private-owned businesses Yemen.