Yemen: What Can Be Done to Help Now

Part of: Ending World Hunger

The standoff between supporters of Yemen's president Saleh and protesters seeking his removal has now erupted into street battles.

Voice of America is reporting that "Dozens of people have been killed in the fighting that followed Saleh's rejection Sunday of a deal to step down." The proposed peaceful transition deal was brokered by the Gulf Cooperation Council of Arab States.

President Obama said Wednesday, "we call on President Saleh to move immediately on his commitment to transfer power." The coming days will either lead to peace or will spiral into civil war. Besides reinforcing the call for peace, there is a way we can help Yemen.

This is by urging a more effective and responsible plan for aiding and developing the country. As Obama said in London today, "The Yemeni people call for greater opportunity and prosperity."

None of this will take place without the basics of food, medicine, shelter, and education that are so severely lacking in the poorest country in the Middle East. First must come interim aid to fill gaps in these areas. Then you have to coordinate a longer-term plan so the country can become self-sufficient.

Yet the UN World Food Programme, UNICEF, and other aid agencies are constantly facing funding shortages. This leaves Yemen always digging out of a hole. There are piecemeal donations from donor governments, but nothing significant enough to set in motion lasting change.

Entire programs like Food for Education have been in shut-down mode for over a year now. Plans to help families cope with high food prices remain short on funding. What about the high infant malnutrition rate in Yemen and its deadly consequences?

Let's hope with all our might that this political unrest gets resolved peacefully and soon. But let's also do more than that.

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Article Author: William Lambers

William Lambers is the author of Ending World Hunger. This book features over 50 interviews with officials from the UN World Food Programme and other charities discussing school feeding programs that fight child hunger. …

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