The United Nations on Wednesday appealed for $2.1 billion (2 billion euros) to provide aid to millions of people in war-ravaged Yemen, where the threat of famine looms.

"The situation in Yemen is catastrophic and rapidly deteriorating," UN humanitarian coordinator Jamie McGoldrick said in an opening statement to the humanitarian appeal.

Yemen: Girl recovers from malnutrition Alarming evidence of misery in Yemen This image of 18-year-old Saida Ahmad Baghili, sitting on her bed at Al-Thawra in the Red Sea Port city of Hodeida shows her malnourished, emaciated body. It has come to stand for the worsening humanitarian crisis in Yemen.

Yemen: Girl recovers from malnutrition Saida smiles - after weeks of treatment Saida was transferred to a hospital in the capital, Sanaa. After weeks of hospital care, she can at least smile, though she can still barely speak and continues to find eating difficult at times. Her father is still worried: "She doesn't eat anything except liquid medical food. She used to drink juice and milk with bananas but now she can't. We don't know when she'll recover."

Yemen: Girl recovers from malnutrition A lifelong condition Doctors believe her condition has damaged her throat. When her family first brought Saida to a hospital, she could barely keep her eyes open or stand. "We admitted Saida to find out the cause of her inability to eat," her doctor said. "Her health issue remains chronic and her bones remain fragile due to stunted growth. In all likelihood, they will never return to normal."

Yemen: Girl recovers from malnutrition Finally gaining weight Her father, Ahmed, who is staying nearby to be with his daughter, said his daughter's weight has reached 16 kilograms (35 pounds), five kilos more than when she was first admitted to hospital. He said Saida's situation was alarming before the war, which began in March 2015. Yemen's crisis including widespread hunger was brought on by decades of poverty and internal strife.

Yemen: Girl recovers from malnutrition Food insecurity About half of Yemen's 28 million people are "food insecure," according to the United Nations, and 7 million of them do not now where they will get their next meal. The US-based Famine Early Warning Systems Network, run by the US Agency for International Development, estimated that a quarter of all Yemenis are probably in a food security "emergency" - one stage before "catastrophe" or famine.

Yemen: Girl recovers from malnutrition Saida out of the hospital The war has pushed the Arab world's poorest nation to the brink of famine and displaced over three million people. Areas worst affected by the conflict are parts of Taiz province and southern coastal areas of the Hodeida province, where Saida is from.

Yemen: Girl recovers from malnutrition One reason for undersupply Restrictions imposed on the entry of ships after the start of the war in Yemen had raised insurance premiums and cut the number of vessels entering the port by more than half. About a million tons of food supplies entered through Hodeida in 2015, a third as much as in 2014.

Yemen: Girl recovers from malnutrition Yemeni women call attention to disaster Yemeni women are holding banners depicting suffering, malnourished children. They protest against a UN roadmap for the Yemen conflict, which is calling for naming a new vice president after the withdrawal of the Houthi rebels from Sanaa. Since the beginning of the war, at least 10,000 people have been killed in Yemen. Author: Nadine Berghausen



Nearly 19 million people need aid this year, about three-quarters of the country, the UN said. That includes about 10 million people in need of acute assistance to save or sustain their lives.

About 3.3 million children and pregnant or nursing women are acutely malnourished, including almost a half a million children under 5 suffering from acute malnutrition.

The appeal from the UN and other humanitarian agencies aims to provide for 12 million people after only 60 percent of financial requirements were met last year.

UN humanitarian chief Stephen O'Brian warned that "famine is a possible scenario" this year if no action is taken.

"Immense human suffering is unfolding in front of our eyes, caused by an ongoing conflict compounded by a collapsing economy and key public and social institutions in disarray," O'Brian told the UN in Geneva.

Yemen already experienced intermittent conflict, economic decline and severe environmental degradation, but the civil war that erupted nearly two years ago has exacerbated the humanitarian situation in the Arab world's poorest country.

The conflict pits Shiite Houthi rebels and forces loyal to former President Ali Abdullah Saleh against a Saudi-led Arab coalition trying to reinstate current President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi. While the origins of the civil war are largely domestic, the conflict has since morphed into a broader proxy war between regional rivals Iran and Saudi Arabia.

The Arab coalition's air campaign and naval blockade since March 2015 have exacerbated the humanitarian crisis, with repeated airstrikes targeting infrastructure. Since the Saudi-led intervention, at least three million people have been displaced and more than 7,500 people killed, according to the UN.

Houthi rebels have also been accused of random artillery strikes and imposing restrictions on the movement of goods and assistance.

The conflict has raised concern all parties, but especially the Saudi-led coalition, have committed violations of international law.

"The Yemeni economy is being willfully destroyed," the report said, pointing to the destruction of critical economic infrastructure. "Mainly airstrikes - but also shelling and other attacks - have damaged or destroyed ports, roads, bridges, factories and markets."

Yemen imports 90 percent of its food, fuel and medicine, much of it through the Al Hudaydah Port, which the Arab coalition bombed. The coalition also imposes a naval blockade and restricts goods entering the country. It has also banned commercial flights from Sanaa airport, cutting off access to medicine and the possibility of civilians receiving medical treatment outside the country.

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The dim picture is likely to get worse, as conflict and economic decline are leading to the collapse of basic services and institutions at a time they are needed more than ever, the UN said.

An estimated 8 million people in Yemen have lost their livelihoods or are living in areas with minimal or no basic services. Nearly 15 million people lack basic health care and 45 percent of health care facilities are functioning.

Some 2 million children are out of school, posing a long-term generational challenge.

Meanwhile, the collapsing economy means the state is running out of money to pay employees, hitting breadwinners who provide for whole families. A liquidity crisis has in turn created shortages and commercial lenders are reluctant to provide credit to traders.

"The end result is an economic environment in which basic commodities are becoming scarcer and more expensive just as people's livelihoods opportunities and access to cash are receding or disappearing altogether," the UN said. "Humanitarian partners face growing pressure to compensate for the entire commercial sector, which is beyond both their capacity and appropriate role."