Kuwait Times

Syria war death toll over 507,000, 13 years on

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Syria’s war has killed more than 507,000 people, a war monitor said Thursday ahead of the 13th anniversar­y of the conflict which has displaced millions at home and abroad. The government’s brutal suppressio­n of an uprising that erupted on March 15, 2011, triggered a full-scale civil war that drew in foreign armies and internatio­nal jihadists.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitor, said more than 164,000 civilians, including more than 15,000 women and 25,000 children, have been killed. More than 343,000 combatants, including army soldiers, fighters from pro-Iran groups, Kurdish-led forces and Islamic State group jihadists, are also among the

dead, added the Observator­y, which has a network of sources across the country.

The overall figure has risen from around 503,000 last March, with the frontlines mostly quietening in recent years. Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad has gradually clawed back territory lost early in the fighting with help from allies Iran and Russia, but large swathes of the north remain outside government control. The United Nations has said that this year, 16.7 million people in Syria require some type of humanitari­an assistance or protection, “the largest number since the beginning of the crisis in 2011”.

The war has ravaged Syria’s economy, infrastruc­ture and industry, while Western sanctions have added to the country’s woes. Syria is home to around 7.2 million internally displaced people, the UN says, with a devastatin­g earthquake that struck Turkey and Syria

in February last year compoundin­g the problem. Ninety percent of the population is living in poverty, but UN humanitari­an official David

Carden said last week that funding challenges could affect aid deliveries and services.

Suhair Zakkout, Damascus-based spokespers­on for the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross, said 13 years of war have had “devastatin­g consequenc­es” on Syrians across the country, causing “unimaginab­le pain”. “Syria has a full generation... who has only witnessed the loss, the displaceme­nt, the war, and they know nothing but these things,” Zakkout said. Humanitari­an organizati­ons are working “to sustain the minimum level of the basic services” such as water and health so that “they don’t collapse”, Zakkout said.

UN-facilitate­d efforts towards a political process remain stalled. Special envoy Geir Pedersen said last month that Moscow and Damascus had rejected holding talks in Geneva, the venue for previous negotiatio­ns aimed at forging a new constituti­on for Syria. Last year, Syria returned to the Arab League, marking Assad’s return to the regional fold after a suspension of more than a decade.

 ?? ?? QAMSHILI, Syria: People queue in front of a petrol station in this city in the UVY[OLHZ[LYU /HZHRLO WYV]PUJL [V ÄSS [OLPY QLYY`JHUZ ^P[O RLYVZLUL HTPK H shortage of cooking gas on March 13, 2024. — AFP
QAMSHILI, Syria: People queue in front of a petrol station in this city in the UVY[OLHZ[LYU /HZHRLO WYV]PUJL [V ÄSS [OLPY QLYY`JHUZ ^P[O RLYVZLUL HTPK H shortage of cooking gas on March 13, 2024. — AFP
 ?? ?? ARIHA, Syria: A Syrian youth buys bread at a market in this town in rebel-held northweste­rn Idlib province on [OL ÄYZ[ KH` VM 9HTHKHU VU 4HYJO · (-7
ARIHA, Syria: A Syrian youth buys bread at a market in this town in rebel-held northweste­rn Idlib province on [OL ÄYZ[ KH` VM 9HTHKHU VU 4HYJO · (-7

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