The Star Malaysia

‘Stop the war on children’

UN urges to stop the war on kids after seven years of conflict

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After seven years of conflict in Syria, the United Nations has that one thing to say.

BEIRUT: After seven years of war in Syria, the United Nations has one thing to say: Stop the war on children.

The numbers speak for themselves.

Of Syria’s estimated 10 million children, 8.6 million are now in dire need of assistance, up from about half a million after the first year of war. Nearly six million children are displaced or living as refugees, and about 2.5 million are out of school.

Over three million children are exposed to the hazards of unexploded ordinance and land mines, even in areas where the conflict has died down. Some 40% of those killed by land mines are children.

While the UN has verified about 2,500 children killed between 2014 and 2017, it says the actual numbers are far higher.

The Britain- based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, which has tracked the war since it began, has documented as many as 19,800 children killed since the conflict began in March 2011. A study

published in the Lancet in January shows that children are increasing­ly bearing the brunt of the fighting, making up 23% of the civilian casualties in 2016, compared to 8.9% in 2011.

The Lancet study reported at least 13,800 children have been killed from 2011 through 2016. And in the first two months of 2018, more than 1,000 children have been killed or injured, according to the UN. “The war is going on unabated with an incredible, unacceptab­ly brutal impact upon children,” Geert Cappelaere, Unicef’s regional director for the Middle East and North Africa said. “This is a war on children. ... Thousands have been killed, continue to be killed. Tens of thousands of children have been seriously injured. Many of them are going to carry scars for life..”

And despite moves to establish “de-escalation” zones by parties to the conflict, the violence has only worsened. Nearly 400,000 civilians are trapped in the rebel-held eastern Ghouta as the government and allied forces wage a relentless bombing and shelling campaign to retake the area.

Save the Children, in a report issued on Monday, said that its partners on the ground have described an “apocalypti­c” bombing campaign that has targeted homes, more than 60 schools, 24 hospitals and other medical facilities and forced thousands to live in undergroun­d shelters.

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 ?? — AP ?? Casualties of war: A Kurdish refugee from the Kobani area carrying an injured child at a camp on the Turkey-Syria border in this file picture.
— AP Casualties of war: A Kurdish refugee from the Kobani area carrying an injured child at a camp on the Turkey-Syria border in this file picture.

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