‘Yemen is bleeding’: Minister’s plea to UN food forum

Arab News
May 11, 2018

Rome, May 11: The war in Yemen has made “the whole country bleed,” a Yemeni minister told a conference on eliminating hunger in conflict zones.

Othman Hussein Faid Mujali, Yemen’s minister of agriculture and irrigation, said the September day in 2014 when the Houthis mounted their coup was “the worst moment in our history.”

Addressing the Near East Regional Conference at the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) in Rome, Mujali said: “The Houthis have destroyed all that Yemen has achieved. They made the whole country bleed. Transport, services, health, education, water, electricity — all added to our indignity.”

The three-and-a-half-year conflict between Iran-backed Houthi militias and Yemen government forces had cost the country’s agriculture industry more than $10 million, the minister said.

“Crops have been deleted. There are almost no irrigation channels.”

More than 70 percent of Yemenis work in farming and the overall jobless rate is now about 40 percent. He appealed for veterinary assistance to save livestock and “pave the way for reconstruction.”

Amir Abdullah, deputy executive director of the World Food Program (WFP), said 18 million out of 29 million Yemenis lacked regular access to food and 2 million of those were badly malnourished.

“It seems impossible to lay the foundations for the future in such conditions, but that’s what we must do,” he said. “The WFP aims to bring lifesaving assistance, but it’s just a sticking plaster. It will not solve the problems of the future.”

Lebanon is not at war, but is suffering as a “spillover country,” the Lebanese minister for agriculture, Ghazi Zeaiter, told a sideline event at the conference, which he also chaired.

“Lebanon is directly affected by the war in Syria. Seven years after it started, we are hosting 1.5 million displaced Syrians, half of them children. This is on top of 34,000 Palestinians displaced from Syria and 277,000 Palestinians who were already in Lebanon,” Zeaiter said.

Housing such a large number of refugees — more than any other country — has cost Lebanon $18 billion and led to a 31 percent fall in exports. About 85 percent of the country’s agricultural exports used to go through Syria to the Gulf, but that route was now closed. The country is also spending 18 percent more of its budget on imports.

“Thirty-two percent of Lebanese now live below the poverty line and 10 percent of households are food-insecure,” said Zeaiter.

The presence of Syrian refugees has meant greater competition for jobs, and weak border controls have led to more pest infestation with open-grazing and pollution of the soil and underground water sources.

Pasquale Steduto, FAO regional program leader for the Near East and North Africa, told Arab News that countries could go to war over water unless they learn to control supplies.

“The gap between water supply and demand is widening. It is accelerating and accelerating rapidly,” he said. “Water sources in the Middle East are finite. There is cooperation over trans-boundary issues, but that can be pushed. If it’s pushed too hard, then there could be war over water.”

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News Network
November 30,2025

The United Nations Committee against Torture (CAT) has condemned the Israeli regime for enforcing a policy of “organized torture” against Palestinians.

In a report published on Friday, CAT stated that the occupying regime enforces a deliberate policy of “organized and widespread torture and ill-treatment” against Palestinian abductees, particularly since October 7, 2023, when Israel launched its genocidal war on Gaza.

The committee expressed “deep concern over repeated severe beatings, dog attacks, electrocution, water-boarding, use of prolonged stress positions [and] sexual violence” inflicted on Palestinians.

Palestinian prisoners were degraded by “being made to act like animals or being urinated on,” systematically denied medical care, and subjected to excessive restraints, “in some cases resulting in amputation,” the report added.

CAT also condemned the routine application of “unlawful combatants law” to justify the prolonged detention without trial of thousands of Palestinian men, women, and children.

More than 10,000 Palestinians, including women and children, are currently held in Israeli prisons, according to Palestinian and international human rights groups, with 3,474 Palestinians in “administrative detention,” meaning they are imprisoned without trial for indefinite periods.

The report highlighted the “high proportion of children who are currently detained without charge or on remand,” noting that while Israel sets the age of criminal responsibility at 12, even younger children have been abducted.

Children designated as security prisoners face severe restrictions on family contact, may be subjected to solitary confinement, and are denied access to education, in clear violation of international law.

The committee further suggested that Israel’s policies across the Occupied Territories constitute collective torture against the Palestinian population.

“A range of policies adopted by Israel in the course of its continued unlawful presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory amounts to cruel, inhuman or degrading living conditions for the Palestinian population,” the report said.

On Thursday, the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas condemned the systematic killing and torture of Palestinian abductees in Israeli prisons, urging international action to halt these abuses.

Citing human rights data, Hamas stated that 94 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli prisons since the start of Tel Aviv’s genocidal war on Gaza.

“This reflects an organized criminal approach that has turned these prisons into direct killing grounds to eliminate our people,” the resistance movement said.

Hamas called on the international community, the UN, and human rights organizations to immediately pressure Israel to end crimes against prisoners and uphold their rights as guaranteed by all international conventions and norms.

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