John Ging, who visited both countries last week, told a news conference Wednesday that the UN's response is limited because it has received only USD 195 million of the USD 529 million it needs in Yemen this year and only USD 232 million of the USD 933 million it needs in Somalia.
"Neither of these countries are doomed to fail" because they have clear plans, very good national leaders and "real opportunities," he said.
Ging said the humanitarian situation in Yemen is driven by political instability, insecurity and an economic crisis that has left the country "on the brink of an economic collapse."
He said Yemen's dependence on the mild stimulant known as Khat is undermining its development because the drug affects health and the economy and its cultivation consumes 70 percent of the country's scarce water resources.
But only one million people in Yemen are currently receiving food assistance, Ging said.
Ted Chaiban, the emergency director of the UN children's agency UNICEF who traveled with Ging, said that in terms of malnutrition, one in five Yemeni children is underweight, and 58 percent are stunted.
"That means that after Afghanistan, in the whole world Yemen has the second-highest level of chronic malnutrition," he said.
As a result, people who aren't getting that money are seeking help from the international community, adding to the humanitarian crisis, he said.
Somalia is "very much at a crossroads," Ging said, and "there is a moment of opportunity ... After two and a half decades of chaos and crisis.
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