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Saturday, 24 April 2021

This Ramadan, Children In Yemen Are Struggling To Survive

 23/4/2021

This Ramadan, Children In Yemen Are Struggling To Survive

Sarah Ferguson- UNICEF

The holy month of Ramadan will be particularly difficult this year for families in Yemen, home of the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

Six years of conflict, widespread economic collapse and now COVID-19 have pushed the country to the brink, leaving 80 percent of the population — including 12.4 million children — in need of humanitarian assistance.

Half of all children under age 5 in Yemen are likely to suffer from acute malnutrition in 2021

Nearly 2.3 million children under age 5 in Yemen are projected to suffer from acute malnutrition in 2021; 400,000 could die if they do not receive urgent treatment. To protect Yemen’s most vulnerable children, UNICEF health workers are on the ground, screening children for malnutrition and referring those in need to health centers, where they can receive the treatment they need to survive.

“When Nour was born, she was weak and wasted, and her health kept worsening from day to day because of our poor living conditions,” said her mother, Souad. Al-Raymi referred Nour to the Maeen Medical Complex for emergency treatment.

A health worker measures Nour’s mid-upper arm circumference with a MUAC tape used to assess malnourished children.

At the health center, Nour was screened regularly, and slowly nursed back to health with therapeutic food and nutritional supplements. Soon, she began to take her first faltering steps.

“I feel happy that my baby regained her health and started moving, toddling and playing,” said Souad. “She used to feel tired all the time because of her poor health. It’s an indescribable feeling as you watch your child recover from an illness that ravaged its body.”

There is dead silence in health centers where children too weak to make a sound wait for treatment. Above, a Yemeni father sits with his child, who is being cared for in the malnutrition ward of Al-Sabeen Maternity and Child Hospital in Sana’a. Below, a Yemeni health worker measures the height of a girl at the same hospital.

“The increasing number of children going hungry in Yemen should shock us all into action,” said UNICEF Executive Director Henrietta Fore. “More children will die with every day that passes without action. Humanitarian organizations need urgent predictable resources and unhindered access to communities on the ground to be able to save lives.


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