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News ID: 84205
Publish Date : 27 October 2020 - 22:03

Child Malnutrition at Record Highs in Yemen: UN

NEW YORK (Dispatches) – Parts of Yemen are suffering record levels of acute child malnutrition due to the Saudi war on the impoverished country, with nearly 100,000 children now at risk of dying, heightening warnings that the country is approaching a dire food security crisis, a UN report and officials said on Tuesday.
Drivers of malnutrition in Yemen worsened in 2020, as the coronavirus pandemic, economic decline, floods, escalating Saudi-led attacks and significant underfunding of this year’s global appeal for aid to Yemen have raised the specter of widespread severe hunger or even famine after almost six years of war.
"We’ve been warning since July that Yemen is on the brink of a catastrophic food security crisis. If the war doesn’t end now, we are nearing an irreversible situation and risk losing an entire generation of Yemen’s young children,” said Lise Grande, UN Humanitarian Coordinator for Yemen.
Saudi Arabia and a number of its regional allies launched a war on Yemen in March 2015 in an attempt to subdue a popular uprising that had overthrown a regime friendly to Riyadh.
According to a UN Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) analysis of malnutrition in southern Yemen, acute cases in children under five increased about 10% in 2020, to more than half a million.
Cases of children with severe acute malnutrition - the life-threatening form - rose by 15.5% to 98,000, and at least a quarter-million pregnant or breastfeeding women need malnutrition treatment.
"We have been warning for several months now that Yemen was heading towards a cliff. We are now seeing the first people falling off that cliff - those are the children under 5 years of age. Nearly 100,000 of them are at risk of death,” Jens Laerke of the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) told a briefing in Geneva.
The United Nations describes Yemen as the world’s largest humanitarian crisis, with 80% of the population reliant on humanitarian aid. UN officials are trying to revive talks to end the Saudi-led war which has killed more than 100,000 people and pushed Yemen to the brink of famine.
Nutrition and other services that keep millions from starvation and disease are gradually closing across Yemen amid an acute funding shortage this year.
The United Nations says it had by mid-October received only $1.43 billion of the $3.2 billion needed for the entire 2020 Yemen humanitarian response.