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Poverty, Hunger & Disease Cripple Childhood in Yemen As War Completes 2 Years

Poverty, Hunger & Disease Cripple Childhood in Yemen As War Completes 2 Years
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PR Newswire

As the conflict in Yemen enters its third year, families' coping mechanisms are being stretched to their limit, risking a total collapse in resilience.

Poverty, Hunger & Disease Cripple Childhood in Yemen As War Completes 2 Years

According to a new UNICEF report "Falling through the Cracks", more than 17 million people - or 65 per cent of the population - are sinking deeper into vulnerability, poverty and insecurity. The poorest country in the Middle East, and one of the poorest countries in the world, is facing an economic, social and humanitarian crisis as never before.

"Yemen is at risk of becoming a forgotten crisis, but there are millions of children suffering who we cannot forget, and who the international community has an obligation to protect," said UNICEF Canada President and CEO David Morley.

"Thousands of children are being killed, maimed and recruited to fight, while millions more are starving and dying from preventable diseases. We have already allowed two years of war to pass. The world must act now to ensure a third year of fighting doesn't steal the lives and futures of so many more vulnerable children."

Yemen facing food security emergency

Yemen is now the largest food security emergency in the world. The number of extremely poor and vulnerable people is skyrocketing. Every second person in Yemen now lives on less than US$2 a day. Around 80 per cent of families are in debt or are borrowing money simply to feed their children. Families are in general eating much less, opting for cheaper food or skipping meals.

"The war in Yemen is exposing children to more deprivation, disease and grave risk to their lives," said Meritxell Relaño, UNICEF Representative in Yemen.

Ten million children in urgent need

According to the report, nearly ten million children or 80 per cent of the country's children are in urgent need of humanitarian assistance. Other key findings from the report include:

• At least 1,546 children were verified killed and 2,450 maimed between March 26, 2015 and February 28, 2017.

• More than two million children are out of school.

• Nearly half a million children suffer from severe acute malnutrition.

• At least one child dies every 10 minutes from preventable diseases.

• One in two children under age five is stunted.

• At least 1,572 boys - some as young as eight - were recruited to fight or were used for support roles.

• More than two thirds of girls are married off before they reach 18.

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