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80% of Yemen children in need of immediate aid: UN

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80% of Yemen children in need of immediate aid: UN

By Afp11:06 BST 26 Jul 2017, updated 11:06 BST 26 Jul 2017

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A Yemeni child, suspected of being infected with cholera, receives treatment at a hospital in Sanaa on May 15, 2017

A vicious combination of war, cholera and hunger has left 80 percent of Yemeni children in desperate need of aid, the United Nations said on Wednesday.

"Nearly 80 percent of Yemen's children need immediate humanitarian assistance," the executive directors of three UN agencies said in a joint statement released at the end of a two-day visit.

"Nearly two million Yemeni children are acutely malnourished. Malnutrition makes them more susceptible to cholera. Disease creates more malnutrition.

"A vicious combination."

More than two years of fighting between Yemen's Saudi-backed government and Shiite rebels allied with Iran have destroyed much of the country's infrastructure and left millions at risk of famine.

The country also faces "the world's worst cholera outbreak in the midst of the world's largest humanitarian crisis", with the number of cases expected to reach 600,000 by the end of the year, the agency directors said.

The directors of the World Health Organization, the UN Children's Fund and the World Food Programme toured both government- and rebel-held areas during their visit.

They said they saw "children who can barely gather the strength to breathe" and vital infrastructure damaged or destroyed.

International donors pledged $2.1 billion in aid at a conference earlier this year but only a third of it has been disbursed, the United Nations said earlier this month.

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A Yemeni child suspected of being infected with cholera is checked by a doctor at a makeshift hospital operated by Doctors Without Borders in the Abs district of Hajjah province on July 16, 2017

The shortfall has forced aid agencies to redirect their limited resources towards fighting cholera, leaving communities at greater risk of malnutrition.

The war in Yemen has killed more than 8,000 people and wounded 44,500 since Saudi Arabia and its allies joined the conflict in March 2015.

The Saudi-led coalition has imposed a sea and air blockade of rebel-held territory, allowing in only limited UN-supervised deliveries of basic goods.

The cholera outbreak has already claimed 1,900 lives since April with 400,000 suspected cases across the country, according to the UN and the International Committee of the Red Cross.

The agency chiefs said prognoses had improved as "more than 99 percent of people who are sick with suspected cholera and who can access health services are now surviving".

www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/afp/article-4731508/80-Yemen-children-need-immediate-aid-UN.html

Sudis are the most criminal people ever on earth.
 
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THREE YEARS OF CONFLICT IN YEMEN: THE HUMAN TOLL

By: Action Against Hunger
Photo: Florien Seriex
for Action Against Hunger,
Yemen
March 27, 2018

As Yemen enters its fourth year of war this week, 22 million people ─ more than 80 percent of the population ─ are in urgent need of humanitarian assistance. Nearly 10,000 lives have been lost as a result of the conflict between Al Houthi forces and government forces supported by an international coalition. The conflict has contributed to the collapse of the economy and basic services, as well as an elevated risk of famine and a massive cholera epidemic. Today, more than 8.4 million people are on the brink of starvation.

In a statement this week, UNICEF called Yemen “one of the worst humanitarian crises the world has ever known,” placing it among the three countries in the world with the highest number of acutely malnourished children.

A blockade on Yemen’s ports that started in November 2017 cut off crucial imports of food, fuel, medicines, and humanitarian relief supplies in a country where 90 percent of the population depends on imports for survival. Despite partial reopening of ports, the prices of essential goods such as rice have skyrocketed by as much as 130 percent between January 2015 and January 2018.

According to warnings from UNICEF, more than 11 million Yemeni children are in acute need of humanitarian assistance ─ nearly every child in the country. An estimated 1.8 million children are acutely malnourished, including nearly 400,000 severely acutely malnourished children.

“IT’S NOT ONLY BOMBS THAT ARE KILLING PEOPLE IN YEMEN. ILLNESS, LACK OF FOOD AND HEALTH CARE, AND THE EXORBITANT COSTS OF BASIC NECESSITIES ARE ALSO KILLING PEOPLE. PEOPLE ARE EXHAUSTED. HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS DO NOT KNOW WHERE THEIR NEXT MEAL OR PAYCHECK IS COMING FROM, OR IF THEIR CHILDREN WILL BE CARED FOR. THIS MUST STOP.” - LAPO SAMIGLI, ACTION AGAINST HUNGER COUNTRY DIRECTOR, YEMEN
ACTION AGAINST HUNGER'S RESPONSE
Despite access and security challenges, Action Against Hunger has been present in Yemen since 2012. Our 260-strong team is currently providing humanitarian assistance in the areas of Abyan, Hajjah, Hodeidah and Lahij. Our emergency programs deliver lifesaving treatment to severely malnourished children, improve families' access to food, and deliver vital clean water and sanitation to communities.

NUTRITION AND HEALTH

  • We perform health screenings and provide lifesaving treatment for malnourished children under five years of age.
  • We provide health screenings for pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers, as well as pre- and post-natal screenings for malnutrition, and we administer micronutrient supplements.
FOOD SECURITY AND LIVELIHOODS
  • Where local markets are still functioning, we distribute cash and food vouchers to enable families to meet their daily survival needs.
  • Where markets no longer exist, we provide food assistance and essential relief supplies.
WATER, SANITATION, AND HYGIENE
  • In communities, schools, and healthcare centers, we build and repair water sources and latrines to improve access to safe water and sanitation
  • To prevent the spread of waterborne disease, we educate communities about sanitation and hygiene, and distribute hygiene kits and ceramic water filters.

Where are Yankee pigs to help or at least stop selling weapons and bombs to devil Najdi Suadis?
 
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Well, these poor people has no say in the world.... but karma is bitach .. In US congress , weapon sanction lost by 3 votes difference ... next time .. those 3 will join to save the children of poorest country on this earth....
 
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UAE gift to Yemen .UAE wants to control all porta in Yemen and Somalia.In Yemen they ruthlessly bomb the innocent people who oppose them.in Somalia UAE is engaged in Twitter campaign against Somalia gov which enjoys excessive popularity among Somalis.Somali people know UAE intentions of dividing Yemen and next is Somalia.thank god unlike Yemen we have allies and we are behind our Gov.if UAE dont change their tone towards Somalia.Yemen will be flooded with weapons .Somalia gov have been curbing illegal weapons entering Yemen from far away countries like Nigeria traders.UAE has become a pain in Moslem countries a.s.s which hints their $$$ may be running out.
 
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war or no war they will keep dying unless they become educated and civilized . there was no heaven even before war it was one of the worse place to be born
 
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But war made it worse.Saudi bombed their infrastructure back to stone age and spared no one hospital' schools bridges and even roads
brother lets open a page of past first before saudis

 
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Why not and which country doesn't sell to Saudi Arabia?



And the looser is Pakistan.
They calling in because huge death toll of Somali and Ethopian soldiers. Should we send them to die ? like 2 other countries army ... or are we mercenaries ....
 
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They calling in because huge deal toll of Somali and Ethopian soldiers. Should we send them to die ? like 2 other countries army ... or are we mercenaries ....

We should offer soldiers to go on deputation.. with rotation of 1-2 years!
It would be win win situation for both UAE and Pakistan.
 
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