The capital Sanaa and al-Bayda have joined the list of Yemen cities without clean water due to the blockade by a Saudi-led coalition which has cut off supplies of fuel for pumping, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said yesterday.
Some 2.5mn Yemenis now lack access to clean water in crowded cities, “putting them at risk of another major outbreak of water-borne disease”, and other cities are running out of fuel, ICRC spokeswoman Iolanda Jaquemet said.
Since April, some 940,768 people in Yemen have been infected with cholera, a water-borne disease, in the world’s worst epidemic in a single year that has killed at least 2,200, and cases of dysentery are being reported, she said. “The water and sewage systems in Dhamar and Amaran are now providing only half the normal coverage,” Jaquemet added.
The Saudi-led coalition closed all air, land and sea access to Yemen on Nov 6 following the interception of a missile fired towards the Saudi capital.
On Friday, the ICRC said three cities — Saada, Taiz and Hodeidah — had run out of clean water because the blockade had cut imports of fuel needed for pumping and sanitation, depriving close to 1mn people of clean water.
“Today, Sanaa and Al-Bayda joined the list,” Jaquemet said.
The United Nations has appealed for the blockade to be lifted, saying it could spark the largest famine the world has seen in decades.
Some 7mn people are already on the brink of famine. “The situation for dialysis patients, already urgent, is now critical,” Jaquemet said.
The ICRC had reports of some 20 kidney patients requiring dialysis having died over the last weeks “due to the non-availability of treatment”, she said.
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