Yemen's national blood bank at risk of closure within week: Official
https://parstoday.ir/en/news/west_asia-i59672-yemen's_national_blood_bank_at_risk_of_closure_within_week_official
Yemen's national blood bank is facing a complete shutdown within a week as the impoverished Arab country continues to suffer from a deadly military campaign by Saudi Arabia.
(last modified 2021-04-13T02:52:40+00:00 )
Aug 10, 2017 14:11 UTC
  • Yemen's national blood bank at risk of closure within week: Official

Yemen's national blood bank is facing a complete shutdown within a week as the impoverished Arab country continues to suffer from a deadly military campaign by Saudi Arabia.

Ayman al-Shihari, the facility's director, on Thursday warned that the closure could exacerbate the existing humanitarian crisis in the country.

"Supplies are running out," media outlets quoted al-Shihari as saying.

He said that the bank's closure could lead to a "humanitarian catastrophe," noting that the facility receives up to 3,000 cases monthly.

The cases include patients with cancer, thalassaemia, kidney failure and those wounded in the war. Thalassemia is a hereditary form of anemia that requires regular transfusions.

The remarks come as the Doctors Without Borders organization, also known by its French acronym MSF, informed the bank it was suspending its aid after more than two years of work.

Elsewhere in his remarks, al-Shihari added that the facility has yet to receive any aid from the UN World Health Organization (WHO).

The MSF gave out its last donation to the blood bank in June after it signed an agreement with the WHO handing over the support to the UN health agency. The MSF supplies cover only two months.

The MSF had been doing extensive work in Yemen since the Saudi military invasion began in 2015, operating hospitals and clinics and providing medical supplies to various facilities.

In a report in January, the international charity said it had been providing regular blood testing kits to the blood bank since September 2015.

Munir al-Zubaidi, a spokesman for the bank, earlier said that patients as well as the victims of the conflict would continue to suffer if the bank closed down. 

SS