Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Childhood’s a growing casualty of Syria’s war

- By Alexandra Zavis Tribune Newspapers

Before Syria’s disastrous war, nearly all the country’s children went to school. Now, they are carrying guns, selling fuel, harvesting potatoes, baking bread and repairing shoes.

Many of these children are their families’ sole or primary breadwinne­r, and 2.7 million of them no longer are receiving an education, according to a report released Thursday by the United Nations Children’s Fund and the aid group Save the Children.

“The Syria crisis has dramatical­ly reduced family livelihood opportunit­ies and impoverish­ed millions of households in the region,” Roger Hearn, Save the Children’s Middle East and Eurasia director, said in a statement. “As families become increasing­ly desperate, children are working primarily for their survival.”

Child labor was a fact of life in Syria before the uprising against President Bashar Assad began in 2011. However, the ensuing humanitari­an crisis greatly exacerbate­d the problem, the report says.

Children contribute to the income of more than three- quarters of the households surveyed in Syria, researcher­s found. Among refugee households in neighborin­g Jordan, nearly half rely on money generated by a child.

Thousands of children, some as young as 7, are being paid as little as $2 a day to harvest potatoes in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley, the re- port says. Those in shops in Jordan typically earn $4 to $7 a day, and a shoemaker’s assistant in Turkey might get $7 a week.

“Carrying heavy loads, being exposed to pesticides and toxic chemicals, and working long hours — these are just some of the hazards working children face every day around the region,” said Peter Salama, UNICEF’s director for the Middle East and North Africa.

Those working in Syria are particular­ly at risk, especially those involved in smuggling or collecting and selling oil, aid workers say. Among the worst forms of child exploitati­on identified in the report involved those recruited as fighters and pressed into sex work.

Children as young as 8 have joined Syria’s myriad armed groups, the U.N. has found. They are employed in a variety of combat roles, including tending to the wounded and recording battles for propaganda purposes. Some have been used as suicide bombers.

The demands of earning a living are among the top reasons cited for the withdrawal of Syrian children from school, adding to concern that the war is producing a “lost generation.”

“I feel responsibl­e for my family,” the report quotes a 12-year-old refugee in Jordan as saying. “I feel like I’m still a child and would love to go back to school, but my only option is to work hard to put food on the table for my family.”

alexandra.zavis@tribpub. com

 ?? RAJA ABDULRAHIM/TRIBUNE NEWSPAPERS ?? Children play in a pool of water in Aleppo, Syria. Syrians talk about a “lost generation” of their children.
RAJA ABDULRAHIM/TRIBUNE NEWSPAPERS Children play in a pool of water in Aleppo, Syria. Syrians talk about a “lost generation” of their children.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States