Aid groups warned a solution to the Yemen conflict was the sole means to stem the spiralling humanitarian crisis. A Saudi-led military coalition for two years has fought Iran-backed Shiite Huthi rebels who control a string of key ports including Hodeida. More than 7,700 people have since been killed and around three million displaced, according to the United Nations.
The United Nations has warned 17 million Yemenis - 62 percent of the population - are unable to access food. A third of the country's provinces are on the brink of famine. The non-governmental Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) said commercial food imports were at an "all-time low, driving the price of basic commodities to rise on average by a third". The UN World Food Programme (WFP) also warned that closure of the Hodeida port would "bring disaster to Yemen".
NRC secretary general Jan Egeland called the situation in Yemen "a gigantic failure of international diplomacy". "Nowhere on earth are as many lives at risk," said Egeland at a news conference in the Yemeni capital Sanaa. "We are not even sure that the main humanitarian lifeline through the port of Hodeida will be kept open," said Egeland. "This makes Yemen the largest food security crisis in the world."
Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2017