Experts predict fastest-spreading cholera epidemic since records began will affect at least 1 million people by turn of year, including at least 600,000 children
The arrests point to heightened tensions within the Saudi-led coalition battling Houthi revolutionaries, who control Yemen’s capital and much of the north.
Saudi Arabia is preparing to send a new, American-trained and supplied helicopter unit to battle along its southern border with Yemen.
Cholera is preventable, but public health reform is nearly impossible under conditions of war.
The U.N. special envoy for Yemen accused the country’s warring leaders of refusing to end the fighting and liberate the people “from the scourge of famine and conflict” because they stand to lose wealth and power.
Yemen Watchnet