In war-torn Yemen, every community is home to many households who face hunger and immense hardships on a daily basis with a significant number of them going to bed hungry every night. Eight years of unyielding conflict have pushed almost two-thirds of the Yemeni population to the brink of famine, resulting in more than 17 million people being food insecure and in dire need of humanitarian assistance. The outbreak of pandemics has exacerbated the humanitarian situation further and has indeed increased food insecurity to unprecedented levels. These drivers of the current crisis are making life worse and more miserable for millions of Yemeni people.
The population living in Almarabea, a village Al-Hodeida Governorates’ Alzohra district situated along the Red Sea coast, are among the country’s most vulnerable people. Their suffering knows no bounds. Like many Yemeni households, they are badly affected by the conflict. In this particular sub-district, hunger is not their only concern. Everything here seems to be in jeopardy: people, houses, animals, their farmlands and even the only water well they have available to them.
The families in this community are vulnerable and at high risk of starvation and exposure to diseases due to the ongoing conflict. Their houses, farmlands, and animals are also in danger because of vulnerability to floods. Almarabea village is composed of many houses located at the edge of an old canal road. During rainy seasons, this canal is filled with rainwater that rises to high levels and leads to floodwater flowing into homes, washing away large parts of their farmlands and their belongings. Their one and only water well they have access to is also in jeopardy and susceptible to being swept away and destroyed by the floods hitting the district every year. When these floods do occur, they really bring devastation heaped upon the existing devastation of war and pandemics.