UN Regains Access To Yemeni Grain After Reaching Hodeida Store

Local Editor

The UN regained access to donated grain stored in the Yemeni port city of Hodeida on Sunday, and began the task of salvaging food that could stave off starvation for millions of citizens before it rots.

Hodeida, which has become the focus of a four-year war between Hadi forces and the popular Houthi Ansarullah movement, is the entry point for most of Yemen’s humanitarian aid and commercial imports.

But World Food Program (WFP) grain stores there have been cut off for eight months, putting 51,000 tons of wheat at risk of rotting. The stores came under the control of government forces after fierce battles last year but a major frontline is only a few blocks away.

A WFP technical team arrived in the eastern outskirts of Hodeida on Sunday to begin cleaning and servicing equipment in preparation for milling grain, a WFP spokesman told Reuters. 

Sources familiar with the matter said the WFP-led team traveled from the resigned regime-held southern port city of Aden along the western coast.

The Houthis and the resigned regime of Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi agreed in December to a UN-sponsored truce and troop withdrawal from Hodeida. That deal has largely held but violence has escalated in some other parts of the country.

WFP spokesman Herve Verhoosel said its priority was to begin cleaning and servicing milling machinery and fumigating the wheat.

The UN expects that process to take several weeks before starting to mill it into flour and distributing it to the Yemeni communities most in need.

An assessment carried out in February, when the UN was briefly granted access to the mills for the first time since September, concluded that around 70 percent of the wheat may be salvageable.

But the flour yield will be lower than normal as weevil infestation has caused hollow grains, the UN said, based on that assessment.

Talks aimed at securing a mutual military withdrawal from Hodeida have stalled despite UN efforts.

Hadi officials are accused of violating the peace deal.

Under the proposed withdrawal, a regime retreat would free up access to the Red Sea Mills and humanitarian corridors would also be reopened. 

The warring sides would still need to agree on which road could be used to transport supplies from the site to recipients.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by Website Team