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News / Nation & World

Starvation, health woes in focus in Syrian town

By Alexandra Zavis, Los Angeles Times
Published: January 16, 2016, 9:22pm

Aid workers on a relief mission to the besieged Syrian town of Madaya were horrified to witness the death of a severely malnourished 16-year-old boy who a U.N. official said “passed away in the town’s clinic in front of our eyes.”

The boy was one of nearly 30 children who showed signs of moderate to severe malnutrition during screenings this week at a make-shift clinic, said Hanaa Singer, the United Nations children’s agency representative in Syria, in a statement Friday.

Although the findings may not be representative of overall nutrition conditions in Madaya, she said they provide a “real-time reflection of the situation” in a town that has become a focal point of the information war that has accompanied five years of deadly armed conflict in Syria.

“The people we met in Madaya were exhausted and extremely frail,” said Singer, of UNICEF. “Doctors were emotionally distressed and mentally drained. … It is simply unacceptable that this is happening in the 21st century.”

Madaya, about 25 miles northwest of the Syrian capital, Damascus, has gained international attention in recent weeks as reports have surfaced of a looming humanitarian disaster in the opposition-held town that has been surrounded by pro-government forces for months.

Local doctors and humanitarian agencies say dozens of people have died there of starvation and a lack of medical care. Pro-opposition activists circulated harrowing images on social media of emaciated civilians said to be subsisting on water, grass and anything else they can scavenge in the town.

The images generated an outcry against the Lebanese Shiite Muslim group Hezbollah, which was accused of enforcing the siege in support of the government of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

Hezbollah and its supporters, however, have denounced some of the images as fabrications. They blame the country’s rebels for Madaya’s plight, contending that opposition gunmen prevented the departure of residents and hoarded supplies.

Trucks from the United Nations and other international aid agencies were allowed into Madaya for the second time this week Thursday, providing a rare opportunity for an independent assessment of conditions in the town.

Abeer Pamuk, who was part of a team sent by SOS Children’s Villages in Syria, said none of the children she saw looked healthy.

“They were all incredibly pale and skinny,” she said in a statement. “They could barely walk or talk. Their teeth are black, their gums are bleeding, and they have lots of health problems.”

The situation was so desperate, she said, some parents were giving their children sleeping pills to stop them from crying for food.

At the clinic, teams from UNICEF and the World Health Organization screened 25 children under the age of 5, Singer said. Twenty-two of them showed signs of moderate to severe malnutrition. They also screened 10 children aged between 6 and 18, of whom six showed signs of severe malnutrition.

Working with local health staff, the teams set up a stabilization center and outpatient services for the treatment of malnutrition, the U.N. said

Speaking in New York Thursday, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said the scenes in Madaya represent “shocking depths of inhumanity.”

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