Children’s Hospital in Yemen Faces Closure Due to Shortages: Save the Children

Local Editor

A major hospital in Yemen’s capital is on the verge of shutting down due to a supply shortage caused by the US-backed Saudi-led coalition blockade, Save the Children has warned.

"Critical fuel shortages and a lack of medical supplies could force the Al-Sabeen Hospital to shut its doors within 48 hours," the humanitarian organization said on Sunday.

The Saudi-led coalition, which mounted an air aggression in March in support of exiled President Abed Rabbou Mansour Hadi, has imposed a blockade on Yemeni areas all over the country. 

The hospital was reliant on the Red Sea port of Hodeida for 90 percent of its imports, Save the Children said.

"The hospital has entirely run out of IV fluid, anaesthetic, blood transfusion tests, Valium to treat seizures and ready-prepared therapeutic food for severely malnourished children," the statement said, citing the hospital’s deputy manager Halel al-Bahri.

Al-Bahri said that fuel that the hospital acquired from the black market was enough to run power generators for two more days.

Across Yemen, the organization warned, 15.2 million people are lacking access to basic healthcare, an increase of 40 percent since March.

More than half a million children are expected to suffer severe acute malnutrition this year [2015], and there has been a 150 percent increase in hospital admissions for malnutrition since March, it said.

Save the Children’s Yemen director, Edward Santiago, said that, "It is crucial that enough medicines, supplies and fuel are able to get in to the country, otherwise the number of children dying from treatable illnesses is only going to get bigger". 

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