You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Syria-Lebanon-Iran
63 Dead from Hunger, Medical Shortages in Damascus Camp
2014-01-25
[An Nahar] A shortage of food and medical supplies has left dead at least 63 people, including women and kiddies, in a besieged Paleostinian refugee camp in Damascus, a Syrian monitor said Friday.

The Yarmuk camp in southern Damascus has been choked by the army since June, along with other opposition-held areas across Syria, mostly around the capital and in the central city of Homs.

"The number of people who have died in Yarmuk camp as a result of their poor health and living conditions, and the severe lack of food and medicine has risen to 63," said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Conditions in Yarmuk have deteriorated in recent months, with the price of food and other basic goods skyrocketing, if they were at all available.

Rami Abdel Rahman, the director of the Britannia-based Observatory, told Agence La Belle France Presse that "22 of the dead were women, and three were children".

Food aid entered Yarmuk last week for the first time in four months.

U.N. rights chief Navi Pillay has warned blocking assistance to civilians "in desperate need may amount to a war crime".

Activists in other besieged areas have also complained of dismal conditions.

In Homs, activists say hundreds of families have been holed up for nearly 600 days in a handful of rebel-held districts.

They come under near-daily shelling, and activists there say they have run out of most food supplies, and that residents now have little more than olives to survive on.

Seeking to shed light on their circumstances, activists in Homs launched a campaign this week, putting up yellow signposts inscribed with slogans describing life in the besieged areas.

"For two years, 300 children have had no schooling," reads one, according to photographs shared by Homs-based activist Yazan.

"One hundred people need urgent surgery," reads another, held up by a young man on one of Homs' heavily damaged streets.

In the Eastern Ghouta area east of Damascus, conditions are also dire, said activist Tareq al-Dimashqi, who spoke to AFP via the Internet.

"No one can provide for themselves, and when food does come in, it is at crazy prices," he said.

Meanwhile fighting raged across Syria, the Observatory said, as the so-called Geneva II peace talks offered no respite to the country.

Warplanes bombarded Daraya southwest of Damascus, while troops shelled Eastern Ghouta where rebels were battling regime forces backed by Hizbullah and the Iraqi Abul Fadl al-Abbas brigade.

Clashes continued in the historic Old City area of Aleppo, Syria's onetime commercial capital, now ruined a year and a half on from a massive rebel offensive.

At Raqa in the north, back under jihadist control after rival rebels tried to push them out, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant
... the current version of al-Qaeda in Iraq, just as blood-thirsty and well-beloved as the original...
publicly beheaded two men accused of "insulting the prophet Mohammed," said activists from the city.

In early January, rebels fighting to topple Assad launched a major offensive against ISIL, whose quest for hegemony and horrific abuses have raised the ire of much of the opposition.
Posted by:Fred

#4  More Muslims have trouble. Doesn't sound like news to me.
Posted by: AlanC   2014-01-25 19:28  

#3  Sympathy: I'm not feeling it. Paleo "refugees" in Syria.... hmmm. Nope. Not feeling it
Posted by: Frank G   2014-01-25 09:55  

#2  All things considered, why move it elsewhere? I strongly encourage a continuation of the Syrian venue.
Posted by: Besoeker   2014-01-25 06:01  

#1  Syria is hardly the first Arab country to regret hosting these vermin.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2014-01-25 05:57  

00:00