Aid is critical in Yemen. The band-aid metaphor doesn’t do it justice. Aid is more like a blood transfusion – necessary to keep the patient alive even if not substantial enough to heal (only a political settlement and economic revival can do that) 2/
Towards the end of last year, a lot of aid programs slowed or were paused – not for lack of funding, but due to interference by authorities in Yemen. It got bad in the South and even worse in the North 3/
Principled aid agencies had little choice but to pause or scale back activities that couldn’t be delivered under acceptable conditions or without undue interference 4/
The UN and most aid donors also took a risk-based approach to this problem. They stopped funding activities that couldn’t be carried out properly and they also negotiated to remove the impediments 5/
USAID took a different approach: it suspended the vast majority of funding for programs in northern Yemen, $73 million in ongoing programs. Even funding for activities being implemented without undue interference was stopped 6/
Meanwhile, USAID continued funding programs throughout southern Yemen (and the rest of the world), regardless of the risks and impediments they face or whether they can be delivered 7/
This undercuts USAID’s main rationale for the suspension: that the aid couldn’t be delivered in accordance with globally accepted humanitarian principles 8/
The correct explanation - which USAID also espouses - is that the aid suspension is meant to be a principled stand against interference by the Houthis. But there’s nothing principled about putting lives at risk to make a political point, even if it concerns humanitarian access 9/
Since COVID-19 arrived in #Yemen, humanitarian need has increased even more – but USAID did not even adjust, let alone pause, its suspension. And that tells you all you need to know about the principles supposedly underlying USAID’s approach 10/10
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