After a “shameful and unacceptable” vote by the U.S. Senate last week to kill a bill that would have halted the nation’s military support for a Saudi-led war in Yemen, the U.N. agency for children is warning about the likelihood of another deadly cholera outbreak.
“In a few weeks from now the rainy season will start again and without a huge and immediate investment, cholera will again hit Yemeni children.”
—Geert Cappelaere, UNICEF
“Let’s not fool ourselves. Cholera is going to come back,” Geert Cappelaere, UNICEF’s regional director for the Middle East and North Africa, said at a press conference in Jordan on Sunday.
“In a few weeks from now the rainy season will start again,” he warned, “and without a huge and immediate investment, cholera will again hit Yemeni children.”
“We are using endless time, energy, and money for issues that we should never have to negotiate. The lives of children should not be negotiable,” Cappelaere added, referencing the months his agency spent fighting for a vaccination program in Yemen. “None of the parties in this war have shown for a single second any respect to the sacred principle of the protection of children.”
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The cholera outbreak has stemmed from, as Common Dreams previously reported “water and sanitation systems that have been bombed out of commission by Saudi Arabian airstrikes that receive direct support from the U.S. military.” The humanitarian crisis has been exacerbated by Saudi blockades that prevent food and medical aid from reaching civilians.
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