UAE and Saudi Arabia pushed UN for good publicity in exchange for Yemen aid: Report
A United Nations document has revealed that Saudi Arabia and the United
Arab Emirates conditioned $930m of aid to Yemen on a UN agency providing
favourable publicity for that contribution, the Guardian reported on
Tuesday.

According to the leaked document, the Gulf countries said future
donations to the UN's OCHA aid agency would be tied to the amount of
positive coverage their humanitarian efforts in Yemen received, the
newspaper reported.
That includes a demand that OCHA seek favourable media coverage in major newspapers such as the New York Times and the Guardian.
“We consider it very important to ensure that our dear fellow Yemenis
are all aware of our donations," reads the document, entitled Visibility
Plan, as reported by the Guardian.
"More emphasis should be placed on strengthening the local visibility
plan by engaging local media...so that donors get deserved recognition
and not to be overshadowed by the recipient agencies’ visibility.”
Saudi Arabia and the UAE have faced mounting public pressure over their
role in the devastating war in Yemen, which was launched by a Riyadh-led
coalition in 2015 to root out Iran-backed Houthi rebels. The conflict
has left tens of thousands dead, while millions of Yemenis are currently
on the brink of starvation.
According to the Guardian, the UN document requires agencies who receive
aid from Riyadh and Abu Dhabi to document Saudi- and UAE-supported
activities in Yemen in photographic and video material.
Though many of the demands were rejected by UN OCHA, among those
accepted was for the agency to recruit “a specialised person ... to be
the focal point to ensure the implementation plan by all recipient
agencies and to consolidate reports,” the newspaper said.
In response to the Guardian, UN OCHA said that most of the donors
involved in "Yemen and elsewhere have visibility requirements that are
agreed bilaterally with the individual donor. Because they are bilateral
agreements, we do not discuss the details of the individual agreements
in public".
"Throughout the conflict in Yemen, the UN has been vocal, consistent and
public in its call on all parties to the conflict to uphold their
obligations under international humanitarian law, including the
obligation to protect civilians and civilian infrastructure. We will
continue to do so," the agency said.
At least 56,000 dead in Yemen armed conflict
According to new data collected by an independent research group, at
least 56,000 people have been killed in armed violence in Yemen since
January 2016, a tally that is more than five times higher than
previously reported.
The new figure encompasses the deaths of both combatants and civilians
in Yemen between January 2016 and 20 October 2018, explained Andrea
Carboni, a research analyst at the Armed Conflict Location & Event
Data Project (ACLED).
It does not take into account the Yemenis who have died as a result of
the humanitarian crisis engulfing the country and its related problems,
such as diseases and malnutrition.
"The fatality numbers refer to the number of people that were killed as a
direct consequence of armed violence," Carboni told Middle East Eye on
Monday.
That violence includes air strikes and artillery fire from Saudi-led
coalition forces currently fighting in Yemen, as well as armed clashes
between various factions fighting inside the country, such as the
Houthis.
Middle East Eye could not independently verify the 56,000 number.
The large number of civilian deaths in Yemen has led to calls for a halt
in arms sales to Saudi Arabia and the UAE, particularly in the UK,
France, Canada and the United States.
So far, only Germany has suspended the sale of weapons to Riyadh, but
this came primarily in response to the murder of journalist Jamal
Khashoggi in Istanbul in early October. Chancellor Angela Merkel said
that until there was clarity over the Saudi writer's murder - which has
been blamed on Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman - the exports couldn't
go ahead.
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