The recent story on Baby Swileh is worrisome as I was told that the babies in Yemeni, the children of Yemeni were starving to death, and that the children of Yemeni had cholera too.
85,000 Children in Yemen May Have Died of Starvation - The New ...
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/21/world/middleeast/yemen-famine-children.html
Nov 21, 2018 - The aid organization Save the Children said the number was a ... at a Unicef-run mobile clinic in Aslam, Yemen, northwest of the capital, Sana.
Sep 19, 2018 - Conditions in war-torn nation could 'cause starvation on an unprecedented scale, ' Save the Children warns.
And then there is:
Help Children in Yemen | Save the Children
https://www.savethechildren.org/us/what-we-do/where-we-work/greater.../yemen
Save the Children provides assistance through health and educational programs to starving children in Yemen. Donate to children in Yemen today.
Yemen: 85,000 children under 5 dead may have died from starvation ...
https://www.cnn.com/2018/11/20/middleeast/yemen-children-starvation.../index.html
Nov 21, 2018 - Save the Children says that an estimated 85000 children under the age of 5 may have died from extreme hunger or disease since the war in ...
and yet with the story of the Yemeni mother, the mother of Baby Swileh who came from Egypt to Oakland,California to say the last goodbye as Baby Swileh is on life support for a rare brain disorder I sat and thought, is Yemeni at risk?
The picture of Baby Swileh matches those of the starving children in Yemeni and I have a problem with this as should the children of Yemeni have Baby Swileh brain disorder and the adults of Yemeni are mimicking that look of Baby Swileh and causing an International War on our lives I believe that that would be so gross that what I had believed about the Middle East would be absolutely true.
You decide:
Yemeni mother arrives in US to see her dying son
San Francisco, California (CNN)A
Yemeni mother who had been barred from traveling to the United States
under the White House travel ban has arrived in California to say
goodbye to her dying 2-year-old son.
The
US State Department granted Shaima Swileh a visa this week after she
spent more than two months apart from her young son, Abdullah. She last
saw him on October 1 when her husband, Ali Hassan, 22, flew him to the
United States for treatment for a genetic brain condition. Abdullah is
the couple's only child. Read more; https://www.cnn.com/2018/12/19/us/oakland-child-life-support-yemeni-mother-travel-ban/index.html
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