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11 December 2022Humanitarian Aid

More than 11,000 boys and girls have been killed or injured in the war in Yemen – an average of four a day since fighting escalated in 2015, though the number is likely to be far higher, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has reported.

Agency chief Catherine Russell, who completed a visit to the country, has called for urgent renewal of the truce between the Government and Houthi rebels.

The landmark agreement was initially announced in April and led to a significant reduction in the intensity of the conflict.

However, a further 62 children have been killed or injured in the period since it ended in early October and 30 November, UNICEF said.

Struggling to survive

Furthermore, at least 74 children were among the 164 people killed or injured by landmines and unexploded ordnance between July and September alone.

Ms. Russell visited a hospital in the city of Aden where she met Yasin, a 7-month-old boy, and his mother, Saba, for whom life has become a struggle for survival.

“Thousands of children have lost their lives, hundreds of thousands more remain at risk of death from preventable disease or starvation. Yasin is just one of too many severely malnourished children in Yemen. They all need immediate support as basic services have all but collapsed,” she said.

© WFP/Albaraa Mansour Mothers bring their children to a WFP-supported clinic for malnutrition prevention treatment in Taiz, Yemen.

Young lives at risk

Yemen remains one of the world’s most pressing humanitarian situations.  More than 23.4 million people, or three-quarters of the population, need aid assistance and protection. More than half are children.

UNICEF estimated that 2.2 million youngsters are acutely malnourished, including nearly 540,000 under-fives  who are suffering from severe acute malnutrition.

More than 17.8 million Yemenis lack access to safe water, sanitation and hygiene services, while the country’s health system has been extremely fragile for years.

Only half of all health facilities are functional, leaving almost 22 million people – including around 10 million children – without adequate access to care.

Education under fire

The war has caused immunization coverage to stagnate, with 28 per cent of children under a year old missing routine vaccinations.

The situation, together with lack of access to safe water, means children are at extreme risk of diseases such as cholera, measles and diphtheria.

Yemen is also facing a severe education crisis, with tremendous long-term consequences for children, UNICEF warned.

Two million boys and girls currently are out of school, which could rise to six million as at least one out of four schools are destroyed or partially damaged.

Renew the truce

Ms. Russell stressed that if Yemen’s children are to have any chance of a decent future, the warring parties, as well as the international community and those with influence, must ensure they are protected and supported.

“That includes children like Mansour, who I met at a UNICEF-supported rehabilitation and prosthetics centre. His leg was amputated at the knee after he was shot by a sniper. No child should suffer that,” she said.

“The urgent renewal of the truce would be a positive first step that would allow critical humanitarian access. Ultimately, only a sustained peace will allow families to rebuild their shattered lives and begin to plan for the future.”

© UNICEF/Mohammed Huwais A small girl eats a peanut-based paste while being treated for malnutrition at a hostpial in Sa’ana, Yemen.

Funding appeal

UNICEF is seeking nearly $484.5 million to respond to the crisis in Yemen throughout 2023, warning that lack of predictable funding puts children’s lives and well-being at risk.

Despite the challenges, the agency was able to carry out interventions this year that included supporting treatment of severe acute malnutrition for more than 260,000 children.

Nearly 1.5 million households received emergency cash transfers every quarter, benefiting roughly nine million people.

UNICEF also provided some 4.7 million Yemenis with access to safe and sustained drinking water via trucking, installation of distribution points and the expansion of water supply systems to camps for internally displaced persons.

Other actions included providing measles and polio vaccination to at least 1.6 million children, and supporting mother, newborn and child health services in 24 hospitals providing operational assistance, as well as equipment and supplies.

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