10,000 children killed or maimed in Yemen since 2015: UNICEF

Four out of every five children need humanitarian assistance in Yemen, UNICEF spokesperson James Elder says. (AFP)
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Updated 20 October 2021
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10,000 children killed or maimed in Yemen since 2015: UNICEF

  • Four out of every five children need humanitarian assistance in Yemen

LONDON: At least 10,000 children have been killed or injured since 2015 in the Iran-backed Houthi militia’s war against Yemen’s legitimate government.

“That’s the equivalent of four children every day,” UNICEF spokesman James Elder said on Tuesday after a visit to Yemen by a team from the UN children’s agency.

The figure included only child victims whose fate was known to the agency and there were countless others, Elder said. The Houthis are known to have recruited thousands of children and forced them to fight, often sending them to the front lines when new battles begin and casualties are highest.

The UNICEF spokesman called for an end to the fighting, and pleaded for an injection of funds to keep the agency’s work going. “UNICEF urgently needs more than $235 million to continue its lifesaving work in Yemen until mid-2022,” Elder said.

“Otherwise the agency will be forced to scale down or stop its vital assistance for vulnerable children. Funding is critical. We can draw a clear line between donor support and lives saved. But even with increased support, the war must come to an end.

“At the current funding levels, and without an end to fighting, UNICEF cannot reach all these children. There is no other way to say this — without more international support, more children, those who bear no responsibility for this crisis, will die,” he warned.

“Yemen’s humanitarian crisis a tragic convergence of four threats: A violent and protracted conflict, economic devastation, shattered services for every support system — that is, health, nutrition, water and sanitation, protection and education — and a critically underfunded UN response.

“Four out of every five children need humanitarian assistance. That’s more than 11 million children.” Elder said 400,000 children suffered from malnutrition, more than two million children were out of school, and another 4 million were at risk of dropping out.

As the fighting continued on Tuesday, the Arab coalition in Yemen it had killed 48 Houthi fighters in airstrikes during intense fighting near the strategic battleground city of Marib.

The airstrikes took place in the Abedia district about 100 kilometers from Marib. The Houthis have laid siege to Abedia for the past month, cutting 35,000 civilians off from supplies of food, drinking water, medicines and other essentials.

The Houthis began a new offensive to capture the oil-rich Marib province in February, but have been repelled by government forces with coalition air support.

Ending the conflict is an American foreign policy priority, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken told newlyappointed UN Yemen envoy Hans Grundberg on Tuesday.

The two men “discussed efforts to engage all parties and secure a ceasefire, address urgent humanitarian priorities, restart the political process and ensure accountability for human rights violations and abuses,” the State Department said.


Hezbollah accepts resignation of senior security official Wafiq Safa amid restructuring

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Hezbollah accepts resignation of senior security official Wafiq Safa amid restructuring

  • Safa survived an Israeli assassination attempt in October 2024
  • A source said “the resignation and its acceptance were part of an internal restructuring move“

BEIRUT: Lebanon’s Hezbollah accepted the resignation of senior security official Wafiq Safa on Friday, the first time an official of his rank has stepped down, sources familiar with the group’s thinking told Reuters.
Safa, who heads Hezbollah’s liaison and coordination unit responsible for working with Lebanese security agencies, survived an Israeli assassination attempt in October 2024.
A source said “the resignation and its acceptance were part of an internal restructuring move” ⁠following losses Hezbollah sustained in last year’s war with Israel, adding that southern commander Hussein Abdullah was appointed to replace Safa.
Israel and Lebanon agreed to a US-brokered ceasefire in 2024 to end more than a year of cross-border fire between Israel and Hezbollah, ⁠which had culminated in Israeli strikes that severely weakened the Iran-backed militant group. Since then, the sides have traded accusations of ceasefire violations.
Lebanon has faced growing pressure from the US and Israel to disarm Hezbollah, and its leaders fear that Israel could dramatically escalate strikes across the battered country to push Lebanon’s leaders to confiscate Hezbollah’s arsenal more quickly.
Hezbollah has fought numerous conflicts with Israel since ⁠it was founded by Iran’s Revolutionary Guards in 1982. It kept its arms after the end of Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war, using them against Israeli troops who occupied the south until 2000.
Safa, whom Middle East media reports said was born in 1960, oversaw negotiations that led to a 2008 deal in which Hezbollah exchanged the bodies of Israeli soldiers captured in 2006 for Lebanese prisoners in Israel. The 2006 incident triggered a 34-day war with Israel.