No end in sight to seven years of war in Syria: children disabled by violence risk being forgotten and stigmatised

15th March 2018

In 2017, extreme and indiscriminate violence killed highest ever number of children – 50 per cent more than 2016

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BEIRUT/AMMAN/DAMASCUS, 12 March 2018 – With no end in sight to the war in Syria, children who have been disabled by the violence risk being forgotten or excluded.
The conflict in Syria continued unabated through 2017, killing the highest ever number of children – 50 per cent more than in 2016. In the first two months of 2018 alone, 1,000 children were reportedly killed or injured in intensifying violence. Conflict is now the leading cause of death among adolescents in the country.

Sami, originally from Dera’a in southern Syria is now a refugee in Jordan. He says “I went outside to play in the snow with my cousins. A bomb hit. I saw my cousin’s hands flying in front of me. I lost both my legs. Two of my cousins died and one also lost his legs.”

“Children with disabilities are the most vulnerable of the vulnerable,” said Geert Cappelaere, UNICEF Regional Director for the Middle East and North Africa. “Their conditions require specialised treatment and services. As children, their needs differ from those of adults: as their bodies and abilities change, so must their care. These children face a very real risk of being neglected and stigmatised as the unrelenting conflict continues.”

The use of explosive weapons and indiscriminate attacks in densely populated areas have killed a growing number of children who now account for one quarter of civilian deaths. Over 360 children were injured in 2017, leaving some with irreparable damage and lifelong disabilities.

• An estimated 3.3 million children inside Syria are exposed to explosive hazards including landmines, unexploded ordinance and improvised explosive devices.

• Over 1.5 million people are now living with permanent, war-related disabilities, including 86,000 people whose injuries have led to amputations.

• Among Syrian refugees in Lebanon and Jordan, 80 per cent of injuries were sustained as a direct consequence of the war.

• Lack of access to proper medical and psychological care has prolonged or worsened disabling injuries among children.

• Children with disabilities are exposed to higher risks of violence and face difficulties accessing basic services including health and education.

• This vulnerability is made worse by the death of or separation from caregivers and the ruinous effects of war on the social fabric.

• Families of children with disabilities often lack the means or ability to provide their children with the specialised care or equipment they need.

• Neighbouring countries, fragile themselves due to instability and economic stagnation, are hosting over 90 per cent of all refugees from Syria. The refugee flow has added a huge strain on service provision, challenging Syrian and host communities’ access to basic services. For families who have children with disabilities, the burden is double.

• For the millions of children who have had to flee their homes within Syria and in neighbouring countries, displacement has put those with existing disabilities closer to risks like road traffic, rivers and unexploded remnants of war.

Widespread destruction and attacks on medical and education facilities have decimated the country’s health and education systems. In 2017, the United Nations verified 175 attacks on education and medical facilities and personnel. This has hit children with disabilities the hardest, further depriving them of the specialised care and accessible education facilities they need to turn their ambitions into reality.

“Before you operate on a child who has been disabled and disfigured by war, you can see that they are ashamed. As the surgeries progress, they become more confident, like they have finally become fully part of this world,” said Dr. Ghassan Abu Sitti, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeon, American University of Beirut Medical Centre.

But the devastating damage of seven years of war has not defeated the determination of the children of Syria. “Despite suffering injuries, lifelong disability and displacement, the ambition of the children of Syria knows no boundaries,” said Cappelaere. “When they and their families are provided with the support that they need, children have overcome their disabilities and accomplished the extraordinary to reclaim their childhoods, dignity and dreams.”

The crisis in Syria is unprecedented in its complexity, brutality and length and cannot continue to be addressed as it has to date. On behalf of children with disabilities and all children affected by the conflict in Syria, UNICEF is asking warring parties, those who have influence over them and the international community for the following actions for children inside Syria and refugee-host countries:

 

ENDS

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Notes to editors

Drained and exhausted from seven years of war, family resources inside Syria and neighbouring countries are running dangerously low, pushing families to extreme measures just to survive. Early marriage, child recruitment and child labour are on the rise across the board. In 2017, three times more children were recruited into the fighting than in 2015.

About UNICEF

UNICEF works in 190 countries and territories to save children’s lives. To defend their rights. To help them fulfil their potential. And we never give up. UNICEF, for every child.

For more information, visit www.unicef.ie Follow us on Twitter and Facebook

For more information, please contact:

Aedín Donnelly, Communications and Media Manager for UNICEF Ireland, aedin@unicef.ie, 01 809 0281, 085 1395272

Juliette Touma, UNICEF MENA Regional Office, jtouma@unicef.org +962 79-867-4628

Tamara Kummer, UNICEF MENA Regional Office, tkummer@unicef.org, +962 797 588 550

Photo above: Hanaa, 8, who was paralysed in an explosion and lost the use of her legs, sits in her wheelchair near her home in Sakhoor neighborhood, east Aleppo city, Syria, Wednesday 28 February 2018. Volunteers from a UNICEF-supported child friendly space in Aleppo brought finally got her to leave her home, months after she was injured. They brought her to a centre where she can play, sing, and draw. Hanaa also dropped out of school for a year, but she has now resumed her education and loves learning read, write and mathematics. Hanaa  attends physiotherapy three times a week. She says: “My dream is to become a physiotherapist to help children like me. And my big dream is for peace to return to my country”.   ©UNICEF/UN0177793/Al-Issa
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