Recently a report has been published by the United Nations World Food Programm, in which the UN alarmed that Yemen is on the peak of falling into a famine now and need quick response to save millions of lives there in which the majority who are suffering are infants and children. Today Al- Jazeera English also published this news.
You have gone through many articles in the past two years from 2018-2020, in which most of the articles say that according to save the children foundation 85,000 children in Yemen died starving in the year 2018, while one of those articles published by telegraph UK says that 5 million children in Yemen about to die due to Starvation in 2018 report. Now we are in 2020, and in the situation of wars, civil wars have not been solved and the situation got more worsed since then, if we took that report published by telegraph UK, I think more than 5 million have died so far due to starvation in Yemen in 2020, as the wars are on, COVID-19 is there, no trade and no money, not even single paracetamol is available as a medical aid to those helpless Muslims and their helpless and innocent children.
"Millions of children don't know when or if their next meal will come," said Helle Thorning-Schmidt, CEO of Save the Children International.
"This war risks killing an entire generation of Yemen's children who face multiple threats, from bombs to hunger to preventable diseases like cholera & off course now COVID-19"
Save the Children Organisation warned in 2018:
Having already identified four million children at risk of starvation, Save The Children warned Wednesday another million could now face famine as the Hodeida battle escalates. It has been now almost 2 years since then, and you know very well the situation of Yemen.
When one health official visited a hospital in Yemen he said:
"In one hospital I visited in north Yemen, the babies were too weak to cry, their bodies exhausted by hunger," said Thorning-Schmidt.
A report published by the Telegraph UK in 2018 say:
A total of 5.2 million children across Yemen are now at risk of starvation, according to the Britain-based NGO.
In the year 2018, more than 10 world-famous news publishers wrote about these crises in Yemen by a title:
Yemen: up to 85,000 young children dead from starvation (The Guardian)
More than five million children in Yemen risk starving to death as food and fuel prices soar ( The Telegraph)
Even Unicef Usa also published:
Crisis in Yemen
Yemen's Children Are on the Edge of Starvation
But the Muslim ummah is doing? filling the pockets of Arab Prince and King, praising them unaware of the crisis.
"Millions of children don't know when or if their next meal will come," said Helle Thorning-Schmidt, CEO of Save the Children International.
"This war risks killing an entire generation of Yemen's children who face multiple threats, from bombs to hunger to preventable diseases like cholera & off course now COVID-19"
Save the Children Organisation warned in 2018:
Having already identified four million children at risk of starvation, Save The Children warned Wednesday another million could now face famine as the Hodeida battle escalates. It has been now almost 2 years since then, and you know very well the situation of Yemen.
When one health official visited a hospital in Yemen he said:
"In one hospital I visited in north Yemen, the babies were too weak to cry, their bodies exhausted by hunger," said Thorning-Schmidt.
A report published by the Telegraph UK in 2018 say:
A total of 5.2 million children across Yemen are now at risk of starvation, according to the Britain-based NGO.
In the year 2018, more than 10 world-famous news publishers wrote about these crises in Yemen by a title:
Yemen: up to 85,000 young children dead from starvation (The Guardian)
More than five million children in Yemen risk starving to death as food and fuel prices soar ( The Telegraph)
Even Unicef Usa also published:
Crisis in Yemen
Yemen's Children Are on the Edge of Starvation
But the Muslim ummah is doing? filling the pockets of Arab Prince and King, praising them unaware of the crisis.
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