Jim McMahon/Mapman®
Imagine that you weigh just 28 pounds.
Abrar Ibrahim does. The 12-year-old girl is fighting to stay alive in an overcrowded hospital in southern Yemen. Abrar’s bones protrude through her paper-thin skin, and she wears a glazed, exhausted expression, as if keeping her eyes open requires every bit of strength she has.
Doctors frantically tend to her. They try to coax her to eat something. But Abrar’s emaciated body has been deprived of food for so long that she’s too weak to chew.
In nearby hospital beds, the situation is just as dire. Dozens of other starving children hover between life and death, while outside, the causes of their suffering—airstrikes, bombs, and rockets—continue to rain down.
Imagine that you weigh just 28 pounds.
Abrar Ibrahim does. The 12-year-old girl is fighting to stay alive. She is in an overcrowded hospital in southern Yemen. Abrar’s bones protrude through her paper-thin skin. She wears a glazed, exhausted expression. It is as if keeping her eyes open requires every bit of strength she has.
Doctors frantically tend to her. They try to persuade her to eat something. But Abrar’s emaciated body has been deprived of food for so long that she is too weak to chew.
In nearby hospital beds, the situation is just as bad. Dozens of other starving children hover between life and death. Meanwhile, the fighting that caused their suffering is continuing outside. Airstrikes, bombs, and rockets are raining down.