The Arizona Republic

Syrian children’s plight:

- By Barbara Surk

Young refugees are exploited as cheap labor in Lebanon and Jordan, providing for their families because adults can’t find jobs in exile, the U.N. finds.

ZAHLEH, Lebanon — Every morning in northeaste­rn Lebanon, hundreds of Syrian children are picked up from refugee settlement­s, loaded onto trucks and taken to the fields or shops for a day’s work that earns $4 or less.

Throughout the day, young boys and girls walk along dirt roads, carrying baskets of fruits and vegetables from the fields to shops.

Some are barefoot, while others struggle with the heavy load.

The children, some as young as 7, are cheap labor in Lebanon and Jordan, where they’ve fled the Syrian civil war.

And they are fast becoming primary providers for their families as the adults can’t find jobs in exile.

They work long hours of manual labor in fields, farms and shops for little pay, according to a U.N. report issued Friday.

More than 2 million Syrians have fled their country’s civil war, now in its third year, seeking shelter in neighborin­g countries such as Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey and Iraq.

At least half of the refugees — 1.1 million — are children. Of those, some 75 percent are younger than 12, according to the United Nations refugee agency.

The 65-page report issued Friday by the UNHCR highlighte­d the plight of the children, who are growing up in fractured families and missing out on education as they turn to manual labor, sometimes under dangerous or exploitati­ve conditions, the report said.

“If we do not act quickly, a generation of innocents will become lasting casualties of an appalling war,” said Antonio Guterres, the U.N.’s High Commission­er for Refugees, during a visit to Lebanon’s border town of Arsal.

Tens of thousands of Syrians have arrived there in recent weeks alone.

With all those refugees competing for work, the children are attractive laborers.

“There are thousands like me, and they prefer to employ boys, not men, because they will do whatever they tell them to, and for less money,” said Abu Mussab, a 36-year-old refugee from a village near Syria’s war-ravaged northern city of Aleppo.

In Jordan’s sprawling Zaatari refugee camp, most of the 680 small shops employ children, the report said.

A UNHCR assessment of refugee children living outside of the camp found that in 11 of the country’s 12 provinces, nearly every second refugee household surveyed relied partly or entirely on income generated by a child.

 ?? AP ?? A Syrian refugee reads a book outside his tent Friday at a refugee camp in the border town of Arsal, Lebanon. In Lebanon, hundreds of refugee children are picked up daily and taken to fields to work, a U.N. report says.
AP A Syrian refugee reads a book outside his tent Friday at a refugee camp in the border town of Arsal, Lebanon. In Lebanon, hundreds of refugee children are picked up daily and taken to fields to work, a U.N. report says.

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