UN gives prestigious refugee award to Yemeni organization
Tents fill the al-Suwayda camp for displaced persons on the outskirts of Marib, Yemen, June 21, 2021. (AP Photo)


A Yemeni humanitarian organization won United Nations' prestigious Nansen Refugee Award for its work on assisting the people displaced by the country's yearslong conflict.

Praising the "extraordinary work" carried out by the Jeel Albena Association for Humanitarian Development, U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi said the nongovernmental organization (NGO) was "an example of humanity, compassion and dedication."

The group, founded by Ameen Jubran in 2017, won the prestigious award "for its unwavering support for displaced Yemenis, even as shifting frontlines brought gun battles and explosions to its doorstep," the UNCHR said.

The award "draws attention to people displaced by conflict in Yemen, a country facing one of the world's worst humanitarian crises," Grandi said.

Jubran, 37, had himself been displaced by fighting and nearly killed, the U.N. body said.

"The areas where we work are considered to be among the most impoverished, and also the most dangerous," the statement quoted Jubran as saying.

"We felt the danger every day but, despite that, we had displaced people and others who needed our help. We couldn't just leave them behind without providing them with assistance."

The conflict erupted when Houthi rebels from the country's Zaidi Shiite minority in northern Yemen entered the capital Sanaa in September 2014, seizing the government headquarters.

The rebels allied themselves with military units loyal to their former enemy, ex-president Ali Abdullah Saleh, who had been forced to quit after a 2011 uprising.

The conflict has left tens of thousands dead and, according to the U.N., is causing the world's worst humanitarian crisis.

Four million people have fled their homes and are in dire need of protection and assistance, but the conflict and its human suffering were often ignored, the UNCHR said.

Jeel Albena employs more than 160 people and is supported by an additional 230 volunteers, many of whom are displaced themselves.

Based in the Red Sea port city of Hudaydah, it has provided jobs and around 18,000 emergency shelters for people who are internally displaced and living in informal sites in the provinces of Hudaydah and Hajjah.

The organization also supports displaced women to become self-sufficient and renovates schools, benefiting both the local community and displaced populations.

The UNCHR Nansen Refugee Award honors individuals, groups or organizations for going above and beyond the call of duty to protect refugees and other displaced and stateless people.

There have been over 60 global winners from different countries since the award was first established in 1954.

Since 1979, the Nansen laureates are awarded $150,000, financed by the governments of Norway and Switzerland.