All warring sides in Yemen are increasingly using teenage boys - who
see fighting as a way to support their families financially - to swell
their ranks, UNICEF said.
More than 1,000 children killed, injured in "brutal" Yemen conflict - U.N.
Months of brutal conflict in Yemen have killed or injured more than 1,000 children, and the number of young people recruited or used as fighters has soared, the United Nations children's agency UNICEF said on Wednesday.
Some
400 children have been killed and more than 600 injured - an average of
eight casualties every day - since fighting escalated at the end of
March, according to UNICEF.
A Saudi-led
Arab coalition has been bombarding the Iranian-allied Houthi rebel
movement - Yemen's dominant force - since late March in a bid to
reinstate exiled President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, who has fled to Riyadh.
The war has killed more than 4,300 people, many of them civilians, and spread disease and hunger throughout the country.
More
than 1.3 million people have been forced to flee their homes since
March, and nearly 10 million children – 80 percent of the country's
under-18 population – need urgent humanitarian aid, UNICEF said in a
report released on Wednesday.
"Children are bearing the brunt of a brutal armed conflict which escalated in March this year and shows no sign of a resolution," the U.N. agency said.
"This
conflict is a particular tragedy for Yemeni children ... (they) are
being killed by bombs or bullets and those that survive face the growing
threat of disease and malnutrition," UNICEF Yemen representative Julien Harneis said.
The report Yemen: Childhood Under Threat said the number of children recruited or used in the conflict had more than doubled to 377 so far in 2015 from 156 in 2014.
All
warring sides in Yemen are increasingly using teenage boys - who see
fighting as a way to support their families financially - to swell their
ranks, UNICEF said.
A quarter of Yemen's health
facilities - around 900 - have closed since March, while shortages of
medicines and medical supplies have disrupted those that remain open,
according to the U.N. body, which said the health system was
"crumbling".
More than 2.5 million children under
the age of 15 are at risk of contracting measles, while nearly 2 million
are likely to suffer from malnutrition this year, almost one million
more than in 2014, UNICEF said.
"I would sell
everything I have to ensure my children's wellbeing... what really
disturbs me is how difficult it has become to get proper medical
treatment," Umm Faisal, mother of an 18-month-old baby in Yemen, told UNICEF.
Tags
World