International organizations reveal alarming figures about the magnitude of the humanitarian disaster in Yemen in the context of the ongoing military campaign of the Saudi-UAE alliance for the fourth year, which is expected to cause more civilian casualties and millions more to die of starvation or disease.

The Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) has said that Yemen has become more like an open prison because of war and the closure of the country's main ports, with some 16 million people in need of humanitarian aid and basic health care.

The council said in a report that as of August last year, 10,000 Yemenis who needed treatment outside the country had died due to the closure of Sanaa airport by the Saudi-led coalition forces.

The report noted that the coalition forces launched 56 raids on the airport during the past two years, which deepened the suffering of civilians while the country threatens a third wave of cholera, noting that the United Nations had counted more than a million cases of cholera.

The report pointed out that since 2015, more than 60,000 people have been killed or wounded in Yemen. The United Nations asserts that the death toll is more than 10,000, and most of them have been killed by coalition fire.

The salaries of more than one million employees have not been paid for two years, according to the Norwegian organization.

The United Nations has previously indicated that about eight million vulnerable to famine, and warned of the worsening situation under the operations of the coalition, which aims to control the port of Hodeidah on the coast of western Yemen.

"The humanitarian scene in Yemen is very bad," said Adnan Hazam, spokesman for the International Red Cross in Yemen, in an interview with the island from Sanaa, stressing the need to open Sanaa airport to enable patients to be treated abroad.

He added that there are three million displaced people in Yemen, noting that millions of others are in need of assistance, calling on parties to the conflict not to politicize humanitarian action.

The waves of displacement continue inside Yemen. Coalition operations have displaced 350,000 in Hodeidah province, and some have taken refuge in governorates including Sana'a, Amran, Taiz and Aden.

Earlier, the United Nations, the European Union and international organizations described the humanitarian crisis in Yemen as the worst in the world.