Yemen News Agency (SABA)
Home      Local   International   Reports   About Yemen   Tourism   Civil Society   Economic   About Saba  
Search | Advance Search
 
  Local
1st Yemeni-Turkish energy forum to kick off
[24 May 2013]
Yemen partakes in Transitions from a Human Rights Perspective conference
[24 May 2013]
Interior Minister meets Finnish diplomat
[24 May 2013]
President Hadi congratulated on National Day
[24 May 2013]
Qatari leadership congratulates President Hadi on National Day
[24 May 2013]
 
  Reports
UNSC Presidential Statement
[16 February 2013]
In biggest ever cleaning campaign, over 200,000 volunteers clean Sana'a
[11 December 2012]
Save the Children provides life-saving services to Yemeni families
[08 September 2012]
On Women’s Day, Remember Our Arab Sisters
[08 March 2012]
International Women Day: Yemen revolution and women
[08 March 2012]
 
  International
Car bomb hits police chief in Iraq's Kirkuk, 2 killed
[23 May 2011]
S.Korea opens trial of 5 arrested Somali pirates
[23 May 2011]
Obama: US to help maintain Israel's qualitative military edge
[23 May 2011]
Tornadoes hit central U.S., killing at least 30
[23 May 2011]
Israeli Forces Arrests Six Palestinians
[17 May 2011]
  Local
Make malnutrition the first priority for Yemen, UNICEF urges
[25/May/2012]
SANAA, May 25 (Saba)- UNICEF has urged that fighting malnutrition in Yemen should be an absolute priority following the Friends of Yemen meeting in Riyadh that recognized the dire humanitarian situation and made US$4 billion in pledges to address the crisis.

"There is an urgent need for immediate action to aid the 13 million children who make up more than half of the population", said UNICEF Representative Geert Cappelaere.

With 58 per cent of children under the age of five stunted, Yemen has the second highest rate of stunting in the world. Almost 1 million children under the age of five are acutely malnourished. Malnutrition is the single most important underlying cause of child mortality.

More than 5 million boys and girls do not have access to adequate drinking water and sanitation. More than 2.5 million children are estimated to be out of school with girls missing out on education the most. Almost every child has been affected by widespread violence.

The extremely poor humanitarian situation in Yemen is a result of both chronic underdevelopment and the violence last year. UNICEF commended those countries that made pledges at the Friends of Yemen meeting on Wednesday to help end suffering.

“The international community has to work with the Government of Yemen to make the right choices in its Transition Plan 2012-2014. The leading priority must be the fight against malnutrition, especially as we head into the hunger and diarrhoea season in June,” added Cappelaere.

The violence last year led to an increase in acute malnutrition among children under five in some districts beyond emergency levels. The World Bank estimates a country being blighted by under-nutrition loses as much as three per cent of its Gross Domestic Product.

The fight against malnutrition in Yemen requires urgent large-scale investments in almost all sectors to improve people’s access to food, drinking water, sanitation, hygiene education, social protection, livelihoods and quality health services.

The Government of Yemen has a Nutrition and Food Security Strategy but it needs to be implemented.


Saba
  more of (Local)
UPDATED ON : Fri, 24 May 2013 23:58:19 +0300