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Emergency medical aid from the International Committee of the Red Cross is unloaded from a plane at the international airport in Sanaa on April 10, 2015. The Red Cross and the United Nations flew medical aid into Yemen's capital after the southern city, Aden, was battered by the heaviest night yet of Saudi-led air strikes targeting Shiite Huthi rebels. Image Credit: AFP

Geneva: The United Nations called on Friday for an immediate “humanitarian pause” of at least a few hours each day in Yemen to allow desperately needed aid to enter the conflict-ravaged country.

The Red Cross and UN’s children agency on Friday finally managed to get two planeloads of medical aid into the country — the first relief consignments to reach Sana’a since Saudi-led air strikes against Al Houthi rebels began last month.

Doctors Without Borders also managed to get a boatload of aid to Aden earlier this week.

But Johannes Van Der Klaauw, the UN’s humanitarian coordinator in Yemen, insisted that the aid that got through was far from enough.

Speaking to reporters in Geneva, he called for and “immediate humanitarian pause in this conflict.”

“We need many more of these flights coming in, many more of these boats coming in,” he said, stressing that the airspace over Sana’a needed to be cleared for “a few hours at least” each day to allow the aid to get in.

The UN is trying to negotiate with all the sides in the conflict to ensure safe access, he said.

Iran-backed Al Houthi rebels have seized swathes of territory in Yemen since they entered Sana’a last September, forcing the government to flee.

The Saudi-led air campaign began on March 26 to push back the rebels’ advance after they forced President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi to flee the country.

The World Health Organisation said nearly 650 people have died and more than 2,000 have been injured in the fighting in Yemen, but the actual numbers are likely far higher since many casualties are not reaching hospitals but are being buried immediately, Van Der Klaauw said.

He insisted on the importance of opening “a window of opportunity” to bring aid to civilians amid fears of a mounting humanitarian crisis.

Even before the latest escalation, some 16 million Yemenis were in need of humanitarian assistance and nearly half of all Yemeni children were considered chronically malnourished.

“This was already one of the largest and most complex humanitarian emergencies in the world,” Van Der Klaauw said, pointing out that the violence risks leading to severe food shortages.

Shortages of fuel also means water pumps will soon stop working, and Van Der Klaauw warned that in Aden alone “one million people risk being cut off from access to clean drinking water within a matter of days.”

“The situation in Aden is extremely, extremely preoccupying if not catastrophic,” he said, warning that Yemen’s second largest city had fallen prey to “urban warfare” and “uncontrollable militias.”