<p>Masirah Saqer could barely open her eyes, as she struggled to swallow the milk her grandmother attempted to feed her with a syringe.</p>.<p>Nearby the cries of other malnourished children reverberated around the pink-walled hospital ward, a vivid reminder of the human cost of Yemen's devastating conflict, which drags into a seventh year on Tuesday.</p>.<p>Masirah, just short of three months old, was undergoing treatment at Al-Sabyine hospital's infant malnutrition department in the capital Sanaa.</p>.<p>Swaddled in a pink and white comforter, her tiny frame and slender limbs were dwarfed by the full-sized bed on which her grandmother sat as she tried to feed her.</p>.<p>The war in Yemen, the Arabian peninsula's poorest country, has mutated into what the United Nations calls the world's worst humanitarian crisis.</p>.<p>After years of protests and political crises that escalated into violent clashes, the conflict took a decisive turn on July 8, 2014.</p>.<p>Huthi rebels from the north pulled off a decisive victory in the battle for the city of Amran north of Sanaa, comprehensively defeating government troops.</p>.<p>The major battlefield win opened the way for the rebels to march on the capital and take it with ease -- but not without a dire human cost, with millions eventually pushed to the brink of starvation.</p>.<p>Masirah was one of the many thousands of infants affected by the conflict.</p>.<p>Weighing just 2.4 kilograms, she suffered from acute malnutrition, her grandmother told AFP.</p>.<p>"We needed a medical checkup, milk, and food. If the medicines are available in the hospital, they give them to us, if not we have to buy them outside," she said.</p>.<p>Millions of children in Yemen now face starvation due to a lack of aid for the country, UNICEF said in June.</p>.<p>The long conflict has devastated the health system and displaced 3.3 million people who live in camps where cholera and other diseases are rife.</p>.<p>The humanitarian situation has worsened since Saudi Arabia intervened in March 2015, leading a coalition in support of government forces against the rebels, who are in turn backed by Riyadh's arch-rival Iran.</p>.<p>Tens of thousands of civilians have been killed, including hundreds of children, in air strikes and raids.</p>.<p>Yemen, a country with scarce clean water supplies, is now facing another threat -- the spread of the novel coronavirus. Officially, the respiratory disease has killed 330 people in the country.</p>.<p>Doctors at Al-Sabyine's malnutrition department, a facility with capacity for 25 patients, have warned that Covid-19 coupled with fuel shortages have worsened the situation and acted as a barrier to treatment.</p>.<p>Many parents fear their children are at risk of the deadly respiratory disease if they are hospitalised, said doctor Hazaa Abdallah al-Farah.</p>.<p>"Some people ... won't send their children to hospital any more" due to fears about the virus, he said.</p>.<p>But the true scale of the impact of coronavirus in the Huthi-controlled north of Yemen remains a mystery. The internationally recognised government accuses the rebels of a cover-up.</p>.<p>NGOs and the UN are braced for a catastrophe. UNICEF, the latter's children's agency, has called for $461 million to fund humanitarian work in Yemen and an additional $53 million to fight Covid-19.</p>.<p>Despite the urgent need, only 39 percent of the first sum and just 10 percent of the second have so far been amassed, UNICEF says.</p>.<p>The agency has also sounded the alarm over the reduction to its services on the ground.</p>.<p>In June, the UN raised just $1.35 billion of the $2.41 billion it was aiming to secure for Yemen during a virtual donor conference.</p>.<p>"They die in their homes unable to get to the health centre or hospital or a clinic because of their bad financial situation," said Amin al-Aizari, another doctor at Al-Sabyine.</p>.<p>"They need food," he said. "The children of Yemen die every hour and every minute."</p>
<p>Masirah Saqer could barely open her eyes, as she struggled to swallow the milk her grandmother attempted to feed her with a syringe.</p>.<p>Nearby the cries of other malnourished children reverberated around the pink-walled hospital ward, a vivid reminder of the human cost of Yemen's devastating conflict, which drags into a seventh year on Tuesday.</p>.<p>Masirah, just short of three months old, was undergoing treatment at Al-Sabyine hospital's infant malnutrition department in the capital Sanaa.</p>.<p>Swaddled in a pink and white comforter, her tiny frame and slender limbs were dwarfed by the full-sized bed on which her grandmother sat as she tried to feed her.</p>.<p>The war in Yemen, the Arabian peninsula's poorest country, has mutated into what the United Nations calls the world's worst humanitarian crisis.</p>.<p>After years of protests and political crises that escalated into violent clashes, the conflict took a decisive turn on July 8, 2014.</p>.<p>Huthi rebels from the north pulled off a decisive victory in the battle for the city of Amran north of Sanaa, comprehensively defeating government troops.</p>.<p>The major battlefield win opened the way for the rebels to march on the capital and take it with ease -- but not without a dire human cost, with millions eventually pushed to the brink of starvation.</p>.<p>Masirah was one of the many thousands of infants affected by the conflict.</p>.<p>Weighing just 2.4 kilograms, she suffered from acute malnutrition, her grandmother told AFP.</p>.<p>"We needed a medical checkup, milk, and food. If the medicines are available in the hospital, they give them to us, if not we have to buy them outside," she said.</p>.<p>Millions of children in Yemen now face starvation due to a lack of aid for the country, UNICEF said in June.</p>.<p>The long conflict has devastated the health system and displaced 3.3 million people who live in camps where cholera and other diseases are rife.</p>.<p>The humanitarian situation has worsened since Saudi Arabia intervened in March 2015, leading a coalition in support of government forces against the rebels, who are in turn backed by Riyadh's arch-rival Iran.</p>.<p>Tens of thousands of civilians have been killed, including hundreds of children, in air strikes and raids.</p>.<p>Yemen, a country with scarce clean water supplies, is now facing another threat -- the spread of the novel coronavirus. Officially, the respiratory disease has killed 330 people in the country.</p>.<p>Doctors at Al-Sabyine's malnutrition department, a facility with capacity for 25 patients, have warned that Covid-19 coupled with fuel shortages have worsened the situation and acted as a barrier to treatment.</p>.<p>Many parents fear their children are at risk of the deadly respiratory disease if they are hospitalised, said doctor Hazaa Abdallah al-Farah.</p>.<p>"Some people ... won't send their children to hospital any more" due to fears about the virus, he said.</p>.<p>But the true scale of the impact of coronavirus in the Huthi-controlled north of Yemen remains a mystery. The internationally recognised government accuses the rebels of a cover-up.</p>.<p>NGOs and the UN are braced for a catastrophe. UNICEF, the latter's children's agency, has called for $461 million to fund humanitarian work in Yemen and an additional $53 million to fight Covid-19.</p>.<p>Despite the urgent need, only 39 percent of the first sum and just 10 percent of the second have so far been amassed, UNICEF says.</p>.<p>The agency has also sounded the alarm over the reduction to its services on the ground.</p>.<p>In June, the UN raised just $1.35 billion of the $2.41 billion it was aiming to secure for Yemen during a virtual donor conference.</p>.<p>"They die in their homes unable to get to the health centre or hospital or a clinic because of their bad financial situation," said Amin al-Aizari, another doctor at Al-Sabyine.</p>.<p>"They need food," he said. "The children of Yemen die every hour and every minute."</p>