| The UN said 1,168 children, more than 70% of them boys, were injured in the conflict in 2015 |
The Saudi-led coalition fighting
Houthi rebels in Yemen has been removed from a UN blacklist of states
and groups that violate children's rights in conflict.
| The UN attributed 60% of the 785 child deaths to the Saudi-led coalition, a figure it disputed |
But the Saudi envoy to the UN insisted the removal of the coalition from the blacklist was "final".
The human rights campaign group Human Rights Watch sharply criticised the move, saying the UN chief's office had "hit a new low".
'Political manipulation'
The coalition - which comprises Saudi Arabia and nine other Arab and Muslim nations, supported by the US and UK - began fighting the Houthis in March 2015, two months after the rebels drove Yemen's government from power and took full control of the capital, Sanaa.Since then, at least 6,200 people - about half of them civilians - have been killed and 2.8 million others have been displaced, according to the UN.
Last Thursday, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon issued his annual report on children and armed conflict, which described the situation in Yemen as "particularly worrisome".
No end in sight to war in Yemen
Practising medicine under fire in Yemen
A young girl and a city struggling for life
It said there was a five-fold increase in the number of children recruited and used by armed groups in 2015 and that six times more children were killed and maimed compared with 2014.
The report attributed 510 child deaths and 667 injuries last year to the Saudi-led coalition, most of them caused by air strikes, and 142 child deaths and 247 injuries to the Houthis. In 324 incidents, the responsible party could not be identified.
Just under half of the 101 verified attacks on schools and hospitals were attributed to the coalition.
On Monday, Saudi Arabia's permanent representative to the UN, Abdullah al-Mouallimi, complained to Mr Ban about the report.
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