| | Date: Feb 1, 2019 | Source: The Daily Star | | Aid groups warn of lost generation as 500,000 Yemeni children flee fighting | Heba Kanso| Reuters
BEIRUT: Fighting in Yemen has forced more than half a million children from their homes in the past six months alone, aid groups said Thursday, warning of a lost generation of young people.
Most fled during a major military offensive on the key port of Hodeida in July and August and all now face a "bleak" future, with no access to education and an increased risk of disease and hunger, the U.N. children's agency said.
"We are losing a generation – many children are losing on their education, and displacement makes it worse," Meritxell Relano, Yemen director for UNICEF told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone from Sanaa.
"Without education they will not be able to find jobs ... a generation that is not educated has a very bleak future."
About 2 million children in Yemen are now out of school after a nearly four-year-long war that has killed tens of thousands of people and pushed the country to the verge of starvation, according to the United Nations.
The charity Save the Children said that despite a lull in fighting, thousands of families were still streaming out of Hodeida fearing renewed conflict and many were struggling to afford basic items like food, fuel and medicine.
"Children forced to flee their homes often have to live in unsanitary and cramped conditions in camps or host communities with little access to clean drinking water or nutritious food," said spokesperson Bhanu Bhatnagar.
Children are at risk of malnutrition, diarrhea, cholera, and diphtheria - a disease that spreads as easily as the common cold. Bhatnagar said 89 percent of Yemenis whose deaths were linked to diphtheria were children under 14.
The conflict pits the Iranian-backed Houthi group against Yemeni forces backed by an Arab coalition loyal to President Abed Rabbou Mansour Hadi.
The Houthis control Hodeida while other Yemeni factions backed by the coalition trying to restore the internationally recognized government are massed on its outskirts.
Their failure to pull troops from the port city under a month-old truce, has revived the threat of an all-out assault on Hodeida that could unleash famine. | |
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