Record number of children killed in Syria: UNICEF
The UN’s United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund – UNICEF – released a report on the situation in Syria. “Grave violations against children in Syria were the highest on record in 2016, said UNICEF in a grim assessment of the conict’s impact on children, as the war reaches six years. Veried instances of killing, maiming and recruitment of children increased sharply last year in a drastic escalation of violence across the country.
• At least 652 children were killed – a 20 per cent increase from 2015 – making 2016 the worst year for Syria’s children since the formal verication of child casualties began in 2014.
• 255 children were killed in or near a school.
• More than 850 children were recruited to ght in the conict, more than double the number recruited in 2015. Children are being used and recruited to ght directly on the frontlines and are increasingly taking part in combat roles, including in extreme cases as executioners, suicide bombers or prison guards.
• There were at least 338 attacks against hospitals and medical personnel.
“The depth of suffering is unprecedented. Millions of children in Syria come under attack on a daily basis, their lives turned upside down,” said Geert Cappelaere, UNICEF Regional Director for the Middle East and North Africa speaking from Homs, Syria.
“Each and every child is scarred for life with horric consequences on their health, well-being and future.”
Challenges in access in several parts of Syria stand in the way of assessing the full scale of children’s suffering and of urgently getting humanitarian assistance to the most vulnerable girls and boys.
Beyond the bombs, bullets and explosions, children are dying in silence often from diseases that can otherwise be easily prevented. Access to medical care, lifesaving supplies and other basic services remains difcult. The most vulnerable among Syria’s children are the 2.8 million in hard-to-reach areas, including 280,000 children living under siege, almost completely cut off from humanitarian aid.
After six years of war, nearly 6 million children now depend on humanitarian assistance, a twelve-fold increase from 2012. Millions of children have been displaced, some up to seven times. Over 2.3 million children are now living as refugees in Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt and Iraq,” the UNICEF website reported.