Press release

UK pledges urgent aid for people facing starvation in Yemen

Foreign Secretary calls for international action and announces new UK aid as report shows thousands of Yemenis are facing starvation, death, and destitution.

This was published under the 2019 to 2022 Johnson Conservative government
A Yemeni girl at a food distribution point in Yemen, April 2020. Picture: WFP

皇冠体育app UK has announced emergency funding to help millions of people in Yemen, as a new report says the worsening crisis has left thousands living in 鈥榝amine conditions鈥� and facing starvation, death and destitution.

皇冠体育app Foreign Secretary has urged the international community to step up, distribute pledged funds and support the peace process to prevent the crisis worsening even further. Today鈥檚 announcement of 拢14 million of new UK aid will help 1.5 million households access food and medicines, and takes the UK鈥檚 contribution to 拢214 million this year.

皇冠体育app Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC)鈥檚 new survey shows that 16,500 people are living in famine-like conditions, a figure expected to almost鈥痶riple by June 2021. Overall 13.5 million people in Yemen are at risk of starving to death or struggling to get enough food to feed their families amid ongoing conflict.

皇冠体育app UK has been sounding the alarm on Yemen 鈥� in September, the Foreign Secretary warned a specially-convened UN meeting that famine was a significant risk unless donors urgently disbursed their funding and increased support.鈥使谔逵齛pp UK leads on Yemen at the UN Security Council and is actively supporting Special Envoy Martin Griffiths鈥� peace plan to end the conflict.

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said:

Thousands of Yemenis are now living in famine conditions, facing the daily threat of starvation and conflict.

New UK aid will save lives by making sure the poorest Yemenis can feed their families. But the UK cannot solve this crisis alone. Other donors must now release their funding and contribute more support to prevent this becoming an even bigger tragedy.

Famine was averted in Yemen in 2019 through an international funding drive to to ensure UN agencies and NGOs were able to provide food and support to those most in need. Since then, funding to Yemen has significantly reduced. This year鈥檚 funding is a record low, and only half of what has been requested by the UN.

Tackling this crisis is a priority for the Foreign Secretary and the UK鈥檚 first Special Envoy for Famine Prevention and Humanitarian Affairs, Nick Dyer.鈥疭ince his appointment, Mr Dyer has met donors and partners to discuss how to tackle extreme hunger in vulnerable countries, including Yemen.

Background

  • the UK is one of the biggest donors to the crisis, committing over 拢1 billion in UK aid since the conflict began in 2015
  • our existing 拢200 million funding for this financial year will support to at least 500,000 vulnerable people each month to help them buy food and household essentials, treat 55,000 children for malnutrition and provide 1 million people with improved water supply and basic sanitation
  • in September, the Foreign Secretary announced a new 拢119 million aid package to tackle the combined threat of coronavirus and famines, which is expected to help alleviate extreme hunger for over 6 million people in Yemen, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Somalia, Central African Republic, the Sahel, South Sudan and Sudan
  • on 20 November, UN Secretary General Guterres warned that 鈥榊emen is now in imminent danger of the worst famine the world has seen for decades. In the absence of immediate action, millions of lives may be lost鈥�

Media enquiries

Email [email protected]

Telephone 020 7008 3100

Email the FCDO Newsdesk (monitored 24 hours a day) in the first instance, and we will respond as soon as possible.

Updates to this page

Published 3 December 2020