Hundreds of
thousands of children in Yemen face life-threatening malnutrition and
millions lack access to health care or clean water due to the year-old
war there, the U.N. Children's Fund said on Tuesday. A
UNICEF report also said all sides in the war had "exponentially
increased" the dragooning of child soldiers, with 848 documented cases -
including boys as young as 10 - forced to fight. Tensions
appear to be easing between the Iran-allied Houthis, who control most
of northern Yemen, and Saudi-led forces after a year of war, over 6,200
deaths and a humanitarian crisis in the Arab world's poorest country. "On
average, at least six children have been killed or injured every day,"
said the report "Childhood on the Brink". UNICEF has confirmed 934
children directly killed and 1,356 injured, but says they are "only a
tip of the iceberg". "Basic
services and infrastructure in Yemen are on the verge of total
collapse," it said, noting attacks on schools, hospitals and the water
and sanitation system. The United
Nations said last week the warring parties had agreed to a cessation of
hostilities from April 10 and peace talks from April 18. "We're hoping that
the truce kicks in on the 10th and will allow parents and families to
come and access health services and other services," Julien Harneis,
UNICEF's Representative in Yemen, told Reuters by telephone from Sana'a. "In
Sa'ada in the last week, there has definitely been a reduction of
fighting in the border area. In Sana'a, we have seen fewer (Saudi-led)
air strikes," he said. Nearly half
of Yemen's 22 provinces on the verge of famine and over 13 million
people need food aid, the U.N.'s World Food Programme said last week. UNICEF delivers
nutritional supplies and vaccines against measles, polio and other
childhood diseases in the country of 24 million, but it is not enough,
Harneis said. "We've got an increase in both severe acute malnutrition and chronic malnutrition," he said. The
report said an estimated 320,000 children risk severe acute
malnutrition, which can leave a child vulnerable to deadly respiratory
infections, pneumonia and water-borne diseases. Nearly 10 million
children require humanitarian aid to prevent a further deterioration.
Chronic malnutrition can stunt growth and development. "UNICEF
estimates that nearly 10,000 children under 5 years may have died in
the past year from preventable diseases," it said, citing lower
vaccination rates and declines in treatment.
Children in Yemen bear brunt of brutal war: UNICEF

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