Middle East war's impact on shipping hitting refugee aid: UNCHR
The UN refugee agency on Friday said the Middle East war had sent its freight rates soaring, hitting the delivery of aid to refugees in the wider region and Africa.
Shipping rates from UNHCR's three main source countries for emergency supplies -- India, Pakistan and China -- have shot up by nearly 18 percent, the agency said, while delivery delays and port congestion are also having an impact.
Every extra dollar spent on fuel and higher war-risk shipping insurance premiums is a dollar less that can be spent in the field, UNHCR added.
"The Middle East crisis has generated far-reaching ripple effects well beyond the region, with growing consequences for global humanitarian supply chains and the delivery of aid," spokeswoman Carlotta Wolf told a press conference in Geneva.
While freight rates have surged, the capacity of UNHCR's usual transport providers to respond to its requests has dropped from 97 percent at the start of the year to 77 percent.
The agency has rerouted sea cargo via Jordan's Aqaba Red Sea port, and has switched to land corridors including truck routes from Dubai.
"For some shipments, costs have more than doubled, such as transport costs for relief items from UNHCR's global stockpiles in Dubai to our Sudan and Chad operations," said Wolf.
The cost of sending more than 2,000 tonnes of relief items to both locations has shot up from $927,000 to $1.87 million, compared to pre-crisis costs, she added.
The Middle East war began on February 28 with a barrage of US and Israeli strikes on Iran. Tehran retaliated by attacking infrastructure across the Gulf and putting a chokehold on the Strait of Hormuz.
The restrictions on traffic through the strait has cut off vast amounts of oil, gas and fertiliser from the world economy, while the United States has imposed a counterblockade on Iranian ports.
UN rights office spokesman Jeremy Laurence said the knock-on effects of the war were having a "real impact on lives and livelihoods", and "unfortunately it always impacts the most vulnerable first".
- Impact on Africa -
Wolf said the impact was "particularly worrisome" in Africa.
Fuel price increases in Kenya, where UNHCR has one of its seven global stockpiles, have triggered delays and reduced truck availability for shipments to Ethiopia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and South Sudan.
In Sudan, the cost of delivering aid has doubled in recent months, she said, with the rerouting of shipments around the Cape of Good Hope adding up to 25 days on delivery times.
"If instability in the Middle East persists, rising costs, delays and limited transport capacity are likely to constrain humanitarian operations further," said Wolf.
"Prolonged disruption risks reducing the scale and speed at which assistance can reach people in need, with serious consequences for millions of refugees and displaced people worldwide."
While its global stockpiles are currently sound, in the longer term, UNHCR is concerned about how costly it will be to restock.
UNHCR needs $8.5 billion for its operations this year, of which only 23 percent is funded so far.