Wednesday, March 11, 2020

Yemen's children are between seige and hunger

Yemen's children are between seige and hunger;

26 Mar 2015 is a black date for Yemeni people especially children, this date has brought miesry to Yemenis, approximately 22 millions Yemenis are facing starvation most of them are children!

The White Crescent Organisation is working on the ground to provide relief to Yemenis but still the donations less than expected to be in action for supporting millions of families!

Pictures show the suffer of children in #Yemen!





It's Emergency Appeal For Supporting An Entire Nation!

#Donate Now &  Make The Difference!

https://www.justgiving.com/crowdfunding/naziya-khatun-3?utm_term=njrYWeP89


All donations are appreciated.
Thanks in advance for our donors!

Friday, March 6, 2020

Small #Charity, Huge Ambition#!

#Yemen

#WCO are looking for the ordinary people who want to #volunteer & make an extraordinary difference in the #Yemen! Providing you have the determination to succeed! Visit:
https://www.justgiving.com/crowdfunding/naziya-khatun-3?utm_term=njrYWeP89


Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Providing Clean Water For Needy and Displaced families in #Yemen.


Thanks God

We could provide a pure water for tens of displaced and needy families in #Yemen!

You can see the photos, how the situation is too catastrophic & tragic.

Please #support our work to continue helping Yemen-i families and children.





Thursday, January 16, 2020

Stories for the suffering of Yemen's children cancer patients


SANAA, Sept. 13 -- In downtown Yemen's capital Sanaa, crowds of cancer patients fill the yard of a two-storey National Onc
Six-year-old Badriyah Hadi Ahmed has been suffering a cancer in her stomach and intestines since two years ago. She lies on a bed in the center to receive a chemotherapy IV after she went into a surgery to eradicate the tumor weeks ago.
"I travelled from Hajjah province to Sanaa to treat my daughter at the center after medics in Hajjah hospital confirmed she has cancer in her stomach," Hadi, the father of Badriyah, said.
Hadi and his eight-member family have been displaced from their village in northwestern province of Hajjah since late 2016 due to the ongoing war in joint border between Yemen and Saudi Arabia.
"We are displaced family after airstrikes hit my village, Al-Madafin, which is near Saudi Arabia border ... we were forced to flee to nearby Washahah district which is also in Hajjah," the father of Badriyah told Xinhua at the oncology center.
He recalled that his 17-year-old brother Qayed had been killed and several members of his family and relatives wounded in what he said "that air attack in late 2016."
Al-Madafin village and Washahah district are located to the south of Medi and Haradh front lines, where daily clashes between Yemenis  and Saudi border guards have been going on since 2015.
"In Washahah district, Badriyah has got severe stomachache," the father said, adding that "months later, it was confirmed Badriyah has cancer."
"I have now to travel from Hajjah to Sanaa every month to keep treating Badriyah...I'm a poor villager with no money or job and I have to buy all her medicines from private pharmacies," he complained.
The information and public relations official of the National Oncology Center said the center has recorded "60,077 confirmed cases since 2004."
"The mortality rate from cancer cases have been appallingly increasing over the past three years. "The 56-bed center receives up to 500 new confirmed cases each month, with which it can't cope with due to lack of medicines, beds, medics and modern medical equipment,".
"The center receives some support from international aid agencies, such as expensive chemical medicines and fuel to keep electricity on, but this is not enough".
Most of the cancer patients were children who came from far provinces of Hajjah, Saada, Hodeidah and Bayda.
According to recent data, around 35,000 people have cancer in Yemen, with 11,000 new confirmed cases each year. Many of them are children.
United Nations humanitarian agencies have warned that the Yemeni health centers are near collapse suffering from acute shortage of medicine supplies, fuel, as well as salary cut of state medical cadres as the civil war and all-out blockade near their four-year mark.
The war has killed more than 10,000 Yemenis, mostly civilians, and displaced over three million others, according to the UN.
Nearly 25 million Yemenis have no access to clean drinking water since the war erupted.
Yemen, the poorest Arab country, is now on the brink of mass famine, with about half of the children under five chronically malnourished, and possible "third wave" of cholera epidemic is looming after the disease has already killed 2,300 people, mostly children, the UN has warned.
In the opposite bed, a four-year-old boy Hadhir Ahmed Mukbil has been suffering from cancer in his lymphoma.
Mukbil came from Radaa city in the southeast province of Bayda. His father Ahmed said he sold jewelry he gave as a gift to his wife on the eve of their wedding to buy medicines for their son Hadhir.
"The prices of medicines in the private pharmacies outside the center have doubled four times after the local currency rial has lost its value against the U.S. dollar since the beginning of the war," the father of Hadhir said.
"I have lost my job due to the ongoing clashes around Radda between the rival forces... I have sold all my wife jewelry for treating my son and now I have no money and his weekly medicines cost 110,000 rials each week (200 U.S. dollars)," said Ahmed, the father of Hadhir.
Yahya al-Jawfi, senior doctor at the center, who oversees chemotherapy treatment for Hadhir, Badriyah and dozens of other children, women and men, said the number of diagnosed cancer patients is increasing for many possible reasons.
"There were many possible causes behind the cancer, including the exposure to radiation resulted from the explosion of prohibited cluster bombs and pollution of the air from the gunpowder of ground clashes, lack of clean drinking water and food and agricultural chemical pesticides," doctor al-Jawfi said.
"Economic blockade has hindered the entry of medicines imports ... and of course the war has also triggered a rapid local currency deterioration...all these points cause most patients, particularly children, to die in silence,".

To donate to Yemen's cancer patients via the link below:
https://gogetfunding.com/raise-funds-for-cancer-patients-in-yemen/

Yemenis cancer patients are the other victims of war

#Cancer patients - the other victims of #Yemen's war


Wednesday, January 15, 2020

Cancer could be a death sentence in Yemen! Every Penny May Save a Live. Contribute Now.

Overview:-
The war on Yemen is exacerbating the suffering and tragedy of cancer patients in Yemen due to the blockade and preventing it from getting medicines to them due to the closure of Sana'a International Airport. Cancer has become the death sentence for those who's suffering of cancer in Yemen, citing the acute shortage of medicines and treatments. Nearly 35,000 cancer patients in Yemen, including more than a thousand children, make up 12% of the approximately 11,000 newly registered cancer cases in the country.

Yemen's cancer crisis amid war:-
It is becoming increasing difficult to get potentially life-saving treatment to cancer patients in Yemen, as the ongoing war nears its five-year mark especially in a place where the economy and the infrastructure have collapsed, it isdifficult to get the life-saving treatment people so desperately need.
It is devastating to see disabled patients leaving the cancer center with little hope of returning to continue treatment, simply because they cannot afford them.

Challenges faced by Cancer patients In Yemen:-
1- The inability to purchase adjuvant and. chemical drugs due to lack of financial means.
2- In light of the current conditions, cancer patients suffer from a failure to adhere to the specified dates for the use of treatment due to the remoteness of the cancer treatment center and the lack of money to reach the center, especially patients who live in remote cities and the countryside.

Your Donations Aim:-
1. Chemotherapy sessions.

2. Radiotherapy sessions.

3. Providing transportation fees for those who are far from the cancer treatment centers.

4. Give the cancer patient a food basket.



Cant Donate? That's Okay.. Raise Awareness!
Not everybody can donate, but everybody can make a difference - it doesn't always have to be money, you can raise awareness by using the twitter hashtag: #Yemen #SaveYemen #HumanityVoice #WCDHR to raise awareness about this campaign.
Don’t forget to include a link to the campaign. Share it with family and friends and help spread the message!

Last Words
This concept comes to fruition with the aim that every human being should be able to live with dignity without having to worry about the very basic right of sustenance.
Please give generously because the only way to live a pleasant life is either in someone's heart or someone's prayer. And in this case you get both!

Donation Link:
https://gogetfunding.com/raise-funds-for-cancer-patients-in-yemen/