Health Ministry: WHO Squanders Resources, not Benefiting any Projects
The Minister of Public Health and Population, Dr. Taha Al-Mutawakel, confirmed that children and women are the most affected groups from the effects of psychological warfare and psychological aggression, noting that international organizations waste millions of dollars without achieving anything. He stressed that the international organizations that supported on the psychological side achieved nothing and wasted millions of dollars, adding, “today in our meetings with them we rejected the continuation of this waste, corruption and fallacies.”
He pointed out that the World Health Organization wants to waste money and grants and works on scattering huge budgets despite our presentation of projects and alternatives that are practical, less costly and more beneficial to patients. He pointed out that Japan has provided a grant of 3 million dollars to support the field of psychotherapy, but the WHO wants to waste the amount in operating expenses for its staff and conduct training courses devoid of interest for a period of two days.
He noted that from the first day of the Bani Hawat crime on March 26, 2015, the crimes that followed, the siege and the economic war, the aggression wanted to target the will of the Yemeni People. The minister stressed that the Yemeni People have turned the negative energy resulting from the inhumane policies of aggression into positive, effective and more conscious energy in the face of aggression.
For his side, the spokesman for the Ministry of Health, Dr. Youssef Al-Hadhiri, said that most of the UN grant funds provided to Yemen go to operational expenses for operating organizations. Al-Hadhiri said in a statement to Almasirah, “Where is the real humanitarian role of the international organizations, if they take most of the money from international donations under the heading of “operational expenditures “.
The health spokesman pointed out that the vaccines that arrived from the United Nations were at the second level, meaning that they could be given, but they were nearing their expiration date.