“Violence and suffering have not only scarred their past, they are shaping their futures,” Anthony Lake, Unicef’s director, said in a statement released on Thursday with a report on the plight of 5.6 million children in Syria and two million more who have fled as refugees.
A Syrian Kurdish woman walks with her baby on October 23, 2014, in the Rojava refugee camp at Suruc in Sanliurfa province.
Close to three million children in Iraq and 3.6 million children in neighboring countries bearing the brunt of the influx are affected by the conflict, Unicef estimated.
“As the crisis enters its fifth year, this generation of young people is still in danger of being lost to a cycle of violence — replicating in the next generation what they suffered in their own,” Mr. Lake said.
In Syria UNICEF’s representative in Damascus Hanaa Singer told a press conference in Berlin on Thursday that the suffering of children throughout Syria had dramatically worsened as the conflict entered its fifth year this month.
Displaced Iraqis, who fled their homes due to attacks by ISIS group, wash their clothes at the Harsham refugee camp ten kilometres west of Arbil, in the autonomous Kurdistan region of Iraq.
She said: "The number of children in need of humanitarian assistance is now 15 times more than they were in the year 2012."
Meanwhile 21 Humanitarian and Human Rights Organisations announced today that the UNSC resolutions were not implemented in Syria, leading to the “worst year” of crisis for civilians in Syria.