Access to hard-to-reach areas is one of the major challenges of humanitarian action worldwide, especially in countries experiencing armed conflicts, including Yemen, given the risks and difficulties that the difficulty of access causes for various reasons.

However, HUMAN ACCESS was able to make progress on the path of delivering aid to hard-to-reach areas thanks to the efficiency and leadership of the association, as well as the courage of the work team on the ground.

There is ample evidence, including the continued provision of assistance to respond to malnutrition in Mashra'a and Hadnan district in Taiz Governorate, as part of the Malnutrition Treatment Project, funded by the World Food Program (WFP).

Despite the rugged terrain of the district, HUMAN ACCESS managed to deliver curative and preventive nutrition services to the largest possible number of the most vulnerable groups, namely children and women, in this targeted district.

HUMAN ACCESS endeavors to find alternative ways and means to deliver the project's life-saving services, including the delivery of humanitarian aid on donkeys and over the backs of workers, facilitating mobile health clinics, and walking long distances due to the lack of roads and in light of the difficult terrain.

The goal of all these endeavors and efforts is to help people whose lives have been turned upside down by war and who struggle to live in unimaginable conditions, in the absence of basic services.

HUMAN ACCESS' exceptional efforts have made a significant difference in the lives of disadvantaged children and women in the focused district, while enhancing the resilience of the most vulnerable groups.

In a country where women and children are malnourished at an alarming rate and the health system collapses, curative and preventive feeding services are important to ensure that they have access to basic health care and food so that they are not more vulnerable to preventable diseases.

Despite all the challenges, HUMAN ACCESS remains committed to continuing its interventions through the Malnutrition Treatment Project, in partnership with WFP.

Besides addressing urgent needs, the project is designed to reduce food insecurity in hard-to-reach areas, as well as serving pregnant and lactating mothers who are in desperate need of these essential services.

More photos