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Hospital says conjoined Yemeni twins need life-saving surgery abroad - Xinhua

Hospital says conjoined Yemeni twins need life-saving surgery abroad - Xinhua
xinhuanet.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from xinhuanet.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Five Day Ceasefire in Yemen

Five Day Ceasefire in Yemen Houthi rebels in Yemen NEW DELHI: Houthi rebels in Yemen have said that they will agree to a five-day humanitarian ceasefire that will enable aid to reach civilians after more than a month of airstrikes carried out by a Saudi-led coalition. The announcement, referring to a ceasefire that is due to begin on Tuesday, was made on state news agency SABA that is currently under the control of the Houthis. The agency quoted Col. Sharaf Ghalib Luqman as saying that the rebels in the armed forces agreed to the ceasefire. Earlier, the Houthis had issued their own statement saying that they will cooperate with the ceasefire.

The New Humanitarian | The African migrants stuck in a Yemen limbo

ATAQ, Yemen The people smuggler spreads his arms wide over nine oblong piles of grey rocks, each representing one dead migrant. A tenth hole waits to be filled. “I buried them here myself,” Ahmed al-Awlaqi says proudly. The rock towers surround forlorn, makeshift graves, which are linked by strings of brightly patterned garbage. This is where al-Awlaqi says he buried 70 of the thousands of people he has brought to the southern Yemeni province of Shabwa. Al-Awlaqi insists those he buried here drowned on their way to Yemen. Others blame the deaths mostly on fighting, or on poor conditions in the buildings where smugglers like al-Awlaqi house them. Either way, the eerily silent desert valley 10 kilometres outside Ataq, Shabwa’s provincial capital, is not the final stop the graves’ occupants had hoped for.

Hunger, polluted water threaten millions in Yemen

news Hunger, polluted water threaten millions in Yemen MohamedAzaki © Provided by N.C.N. Limited A teenager holds his malnourished brother in Hajjah Province, north Yemen, on Dec. 14, 2020. (Xinhua/Mohammed Al-Wafi) We are facing a major problem which is the lack of malnutrition medications amid the increasing numbers of malnutrition cases among children and pregnant women, says a Yemeni doctor. HAJJAH, Yemen, Dec. 15 (Xinhua) Hadeel Abdu cries from hunger and stomach pains all day. The two-year-old girl can barely stand on her feet. According to the United Nations, Yemen is facing the worst humanitarian crisis on the planet, with more than 2 million children suffering from severe malnutrition and over 20 million at the brink of famine.

Feature: Hunger, polluted water threaten millions in Yemen - World News

2020-12-15 11:05:23 GMT2020-12-15 19:05:23(Beijing Time) Xinhua English HAJJAH, Yemen, Dec. 15 (Xinhua) Hadeel Abdu cries from hunger and stomach pains all day. The two-year-old girl can barely stand on her feet. According to the United Nations, Yemen is facing the worst humanitarian crisis on the planet, with more than 2 million children suffering from severe malnutrition and over 20 million at the brink of famine. The over six-year war has destroyed the country s infrastructure and shattered its health and economic systems. Hadeel has been ill for six months and her situation is getting worse, Hadeel s grandmother, Nisaybah Haj, told Xinhua in front of the family s hut in the border district of Haradh in Yemen s northwestern province of Hajjah.

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