For more than 10 years, conflict has raged in Yemen, subjecting its people to physical danger, displacement and hunger.
Over 19.5 million people in Yemen are in desperate need of help, and more than half of them are children. They do not have enough food and lack access to clean water and good healthcare.
About 17.1 million people in Yemen do not know where their next meal will come from, with over half of all children suffering from chronic malnutrition.
Over 80% of the population live below the poverty line, and there has been a 34% increase in acute malnutrition among children under 5 in southern Yemen.
Disease, starvation and healthcare collapse
Unprecedented flooding and windstorms in August 2024 further displaced tens of thousands of families, destroying vital infrastructure, and fuelling the rapid spread of cholera.
These natural disasters and the collapse of the Black Sea Grain Initiative in 2023, which had previously allowed grain to be safely exported from Ukraine during the war in the country, means the situation is only getting worse.
Yemen is one of the most food-insecure countries in the world. The lives of millions of children and their mothers in danger. If severely malnourished children do not get the right treatment, they face a 30 to 50% risk of death.
The crisis extends beyond just food and malnutrition. Less than half of the country’s health facilities are working, and many are without the equipment they need. The country’s water infrastructure is also in bad shape, making it hard for people to stay healthy and clean. In these dire conditions, one child dies every 10 minutes from preventable diseases.
In addition to these challenges, 3.2 million children are unable to attend school and receive the education they need.
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