:A seven-year-old severely malnourished Yemeni girl, whose picture recently further alerted the international community to the disaster-hit nationโ€™s plight, has died amid the ongoing Saudi-led war on the country.

On Saturday, various media reports cited Yemenโ€™s Health Ministry as reporting the death of the girl, named as Amal Hussein.

Amalโ€™s picture turned up in The New York Times last week, showing her lying on a bed at a health center in Aslam in the northwestern Yemen Hajjah Province, 144 kilometers (90 miles) northwest of the capital, Sanaโ€™a. Her mother,

Mariam Ali, has told the paper that she died on October 26.

The mother said her heart was โ€œbroken,โ€ adding, โ€œAmal was always smiling. Now Iโ€™m worried for my other children.โ€

A Saudi-led coalition has been attacking the Arab worldโ€™s already most miserable country since March 2015.

More than 15,000 have died since the war started with the aim of returning Yemenโ€™s former Saudi-aligned officials.

The Saudis have been receiving arms and logistical support as well as bombing coordinates and aerial refueling, mostly from the United States, but also from its close European allies, the UK and France.

Only three days before the surfacing of Amalโ€™s picture, the United Nations humanitarian chief said the war had left as many as 8.4 million people in the country in need of urgent food aid.

UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator Mark Lowcock wrote in an analysis on Yemen that three million Yemenis were malnourished, including 1.1 million pregnant women, โ€œand more than 400,000 severely acutely malnourished children.โ€

Humanitarian officials โ€œestimate that 3.5 million to four million more people could become severely food insecure in the months ahead,โ€ the report noted.

โ€œWe may now be approaching a tipping point, beyond which it will be impossible to prevent massive loss of life as a result of widespread famine across the country,โ€ Lowcock said. โ€œWe are already seeing pockets of famine-like conditions, including cases where people are eating leaves,โ€ he added.