Saudi Arabia’s inclusion in a United Nations report on armies that kill and maim children — which incited that country’s fury — resurfaced on Tuesday in a Security Council meeting, two months after the Saudis pressed Secretary General Ban Ki-moon into temporarily removing the designation.

At a council meeting on children and armed conflict, Mr. Ban said a review of Saudi Arabia’s original inclusion in the annual report was still incomplete. He also said that the Saudis had furnished new information “to prevent and end grave violations against children.”

Mr. Ban did not specify the nature of the information or its source. Also left unclear was whether Saudi Arabia’s removal from the list would remain temporary.

The Saudi outrage at Mr. Ban exploded in June when the report was first disclosed; it showed that a Saudi-led military coalition fighting insurgents in Yemen had been included in the report’s annex of armies that kill children.