Number Of Children Affected By Conflict In Syria Has Doubled Since Last Year – UN
New York, Mar 10 2014 7:00PM
As the conflict in Syria enters its fourth year, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has released a new report
that carries alarming news: more than twice as many children are affected by the hostilities than were 12 months ago,
and particularly hard hit are up to a million children trapped in areas that are under siege or that are hard to reach
with humanitarian assistance due to continued violence.
“For Syria’s children, the past three years have been the longest of their lives. Must they endure another year of
suffering?” asked UNICEF Executive Director Anthony Lake, <"http://www.wfp.org/news/news-release/syria-conflict-enters-fourth-year-some-food-reaches-previously-inaccessible-areas">calling
for an immediate end to the violence and increased support for those affected.
The UNICEF chief’s comments come as the agency releases a new report, U<"http://www.unicef.org/publications/index_72815.html">nder Siege: the devastating impact on children of three years
of conflict in Syria, which estimates that a total of 5.5 million children have had their lives devastated by the war, and calls on the
international community to take action.
The report shares individual stories of children living in Syria or living as refugees in neighbouring countries, and
highlights the profound traumas many have experienced. Children such as four-year-old Adnan, who fled with his family to
Lebanon, suffered facial scarring when his home was bombed and still suffers from emotional distress. “He cries all
night,” his mother is quoted as saying. “He is scared of everything and is afraid when we leave him, even for a second.”
UNICEF estimates that there are 2 million children like Adnan in need of psychological support or treatment.
Among the hardest hit are up to a million children who are trapped in under siege and hard-to-reach areas. Cut off from
aid, living in rubble and struggling to find food, many Syrian children have been left without protection, medical care
or psychological support, and have little or no access to education. In the very worst cases children and pregnant women
have been deliberately wounded or killed by snipers.
In host countries, 1.2 million Syrian children are now refugees living in camps and overwhelmed host communities, and
have limited access to clean water and nutritious food. UNICEF’s report goes on to say that in the past three years,
Syrian children have been forced to grow up faster than any child should, and indicates 1 in 10 refugee children is now
working and 1 in every 5 Syrian girls in Jordan is forced into early marriage.
“This war has to end so that children can return to their homes to rebuild their lives in safety with their family and
friends. This third devastating year for Syrian children must be the last,” insisted Mr. Lake.
The report appeals to the international community to take action in six steps: end the violence in Syria now, grant
immediate access to the under-reached 1 million children inside Syria, protect them from exploitation and harm, invest
in their education, provide them with psychological care, and support host communities and governments to mitigate the
social and economic impact of the conflict on families.
Meanwhile, the UN World Food Programme (WFP) also <"http://www.wfp.org/news/news-release/syria-conflict-enters-fourth-year-some-food-reaches-previously-inaccessible-areas">deplored
the difficult access to certain areas in Syria where people are in desperate need of nutrition, in a news release
published earlier today. Though some locally-negotiated ceasefires allowed WFP to reach some previously inaccessible
areas like Al-Houle in rural Homs or Ar-Raqqa Governorate, delivering food to people in desperate need remains a
challenge. Worsening security conditions is creating setbacks in several areas such as the Northeast governorate of
Deir-Ezzor.
“One-off convoys into besieged areas can provide temporary relief, but WFP still needs proper and sustained access to
people to provide life-saving assistance and also to assess the scale of the needs,” said Amir Abdulla, WFP’s Deputy
Executive Director and Chief Operating Officer, in Geneva.
In February, WFP assisted 3.7 million people in Syria and more than 1.5 million refugees in neighbouring countries. The
UN food agency aims to reach as many as 4.25 million people inside Syria every month, but insecurity is leaving half a
million people without food assistance.
ENDS