Entisaf Organization: 60,000 civilians are victims of the aggression, including more than 15,000 women and children

The Entisaf Organization for Women and Children’s Rights reported that the number of civilian casualties resulting from the US-Saudi aggression reached approximately 60,000 martyrs and wounded, including 15,438 women and children, as of March 2026.

 

In a statement issued on the 11th anniversary of the aggression, the organization said, “These figures are not merely numbers; they serve as a condemnation of the international community’s complete silence and expose the hypocrisy of international human rights literature, placing the world’s conscience before an unprecedented moral and humanitarian failure that has persisted for eleven years of systematic siege.”

 

The statement clarified that the number of martyrs and wounded reached approximately 60,000 civilians, including 5,787 women, of whom 2,547 were martyred and 3,240 were wounded. The number of child martyrs and wounded exceeded 9,651, including 4,247 martyrs and 5,404 wounded.

 

The Entisaf Organization also stated that the continued use of explosive remnants of war has placed Yemen third globally in terms of the number of landmine victims. Cities and rural areas have been transformed into death traps littered with cluster bombs and remnants of war since March 2015.

 

The organization noted that statistics issued by the Executive Mine Action Center on December 10, 2015, show that these prohibited weapons have claimed the lives and injured 10,689 people, including 3,952 martyrs and 6,737 wounded. It emphasized that the most vulnerable groups were the primary targets of these deadly weapons, with the toll including 2,504 children and 1,102 women.

 

Also , added that the Saudi-led coalition destroyed more than 2,200 government and service buildings, including social welfare centers and facilities for people with disabilities. It stated that the war has caused a catastrophic 300% increase in rates of physical disability, warning that cluster bombs and landmine remnants pose a persistent threat to the lives of civilians for generations to come.

 

It noted that the number of people with disabilities has risen to nearly five million, representing 15% of Yemen’s total population, one of the highest rates recorded globally, while nearly one million Yemeni children suffer from various disabilities as a result of direct targeting or war remnants.

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