Feed Those Displaced by the War in Yemen

William Lambers
Imagine being displaced from your home by a war. You leave almost everything behind. You have to find shelter somewhere else, away from the conflict zone, maybe in a refugee camp. You have to depend on others entirely for food, medicine and shelter.

You would hope others would come to your aid. For people in Yemen, displaced by the war in the northern part of their country, they depend on rations from the UN World Food Programme (WFP). However, WFP has received low funding for its relief operation. These victims of war are living with reduced rations, another blow to suffer.

Georgia Warner, a WFP officer, recently met with some of these internally displaced Yemenis at a food distribution center. Warner listened to the people voice their concerns over the distributions. But the main concern, the reduced rations, is one only donors can fix. Warner said, "I promised that we are absolutely working on it and tried to be candid about lack of funding - they understood and thanked me for trying."

Despite all the interest in Yemen, ranging from a Senate Resolution to the Pentagon discussing a billion dollars in military aid to counter Al Qaeda, there is so little attention paid to food. Aside from the war victims relief, other food aid programs for infants and school children also get one cut after another. From a humanitarian or national security point of view, it just does not make sense.


Even a recent donation from the U.S. of 13 million still leaves a 53% funding gap in WFP's 2010 Yemen operation. It would not take that much for the U.S. and international partners to fix this. And certainly no sound strategy for Yemen can do without a roadmap to end hunger. The U.S. should know better than anyone, based on our World War II experience, the meaning of Food for Peace. But somehow, this has gotten lost in the halls of Washington.

There is much healing to do in Yemen from war, hunger, and poverty. It starts with food and compassion.

You can donate at the World Food Program USA site.

Article first published as Feed Those Displaced by the War in Yemen on Blogcritics.

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William Lambers

William Lambers is the author of several books including "Ending World Hunger: School Lunches for Kids Around the World." This book features over 50 interviews with officials from the UN World Food Programme, Catholic Relief Services, World Vision, Shakira's Barefoot Foundation and ChildsLife International. The interviews, arranged by country, detail school feeding programs that fight child hunger. His articles have been published by the History News Network, the Cincinnati Enquirer, the New York Times, the Chicago Sun-Times, the San Diego Union-Tribune and the Bakersfield Californian. His series of interviews with officials from the UN World Food Programme is also available on the American Chronicle site.

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