In a country where most people must skip meals, malnutrition hits the youngest family members first. It stunts childrens development and, if left untreated, it can kill them. War, a collapsed economy and an air-and-sea blockade of Yemen enforced by Saudi Arabia with US backing have left 17 million Yemenis struggling to avoid hunger.
Childhood nutrition was not on Algohbarys mind one year ago. Then, he was focused on his own losses from the Yemen war: A best friend killed in an air strike, his university classes cancelled as foreign faculty fled the country.
His education on hold, Algohbary picked up his camera. He documented the struggles of war survivors on long road trips across bombed out regions of northern Yemen, publishing the most powerful images on Twitter.
I posted a photo of Jamal, Algohbary says. He was suffering from malnutrition. I posted the photo, and a donor said that she wanted to donate for this child.
While nutrition treatment is available for free at centers funded by UNICEF, Yemeni families in poverty cant afford to travel to the clinics. And even if they do get there, says Hanan, they cannot afford food and accommodation for family members to stay with the child for the duration required for the child to return to good health.
Jamal was admitted to the UNICEF clinic at al-Jamhouri hospital, in Saada, Yemens northernmost province.
What Ahmad did, in effect, was sponsor the family of Jamal to ensure he could stay in the clinic for a full month until he had returned to good health, almost certainly saving his life, says Hannan, who followed Jamals recovery through Algohbarys social media posts.
Much more here. Be warned, as you might have guessed you will see starving children
https://www.pri.org/stories/2017-09-01/one-man-ngo-tries-save-starving-kids-yemen
Lock if old