Saudi Arabia to transfer $2B to Yemen after urgent plea from war-torn country
Coalition led by Riyadh has been carrying out airstrikes in impoverished Arab country for nearly 3 years
Saudi Arabia's King Salman ordered the transfer of $2 billion to Yemen on Wednesday, a day after Yemen's Saudi-backed prime minister made an urgent appeal on the kingdom and its allies to save the local currency from "complete collapse."
Prime Minister Ahmed Obeid bin Daghir had called on the kingdom and its allies to act "now, not tomorrow," and said saving the Yemeni rial means "saving Yemenis from inevitable famine." In his letter, he said Yemen needed a bailout.
For nearly three years, a Saudi-led coalition backed by the United States has been carrying out airstrikes in Yemen against Iranian-allied rebels, known as Houthis, after the rebels overran the capital of Sanaa and forced Yemen's government into exile.
The war has left more than 10,000 civilians dead, displaced some two million people and pushed millions to the brink of famine. The United Nations calls Yemen the world's worst humanitarian crisis.
Saudi Arabia said in a statement that the funds would be deposited in Yemen's central bank to help address the "deteriorating economic situation faced by the Yemeni people."
Humanitarian crisis
Last year, the Saudi and internationally backed Yemeni government created an alternative central bank from the one in the rebel-held Sanaa, moving it to the southern port city of Aden.
However, the governor of the Aden bank, Monasser al-Quaiti, said last year that the Saudi-led coalition had blocked 13 flights bringing cash into the country and was "strangling" its economy. The kingdom accuses the Houthis of stealing government revenues meant for public services and of manipulating the exchange rate.
The rial, trading at 500 to the dollar, has lost half its value since the war began in March 2015. Food and fuel prices have skyrocketed and hundreds of thousands of civil servants, including doctors and nurses at government-run hospitals, have not been paid in more than a year.
The economic collapse has contributed to the breakdown of basic services, which in turn has fuelled a cholera outbreak that has killed some 2,000 people and infected about one million so far.