STARVATION, THE NEW WAR TOOL IN SYRIA

World Bulletin
World Bulletin

Damascus, 27 Rabi’ul Awwal 1437/7 January 2016 (MINA) – Twenty-three people died of starvation last month in the blockaded town of Madaya northwest of Damascus, a new report revealed.

Madaya residents lack many basic needs after being victims of an ongoing blockade by the Assad regime and the Hezbollah Shia militia, which planted landmines around the town, World Bulletin quoted by Mi’raj Islamic News Agency (MINA) as reporting.

According to the Madaya health committee report, six children were among the victims in December.

Eight other people were killed by landmines as they tried to escape the town, which has been under siege for 190 days so far, the report added.

Also Read:  ERC WARNS EGYPT 'POLITICISED JUDICIARY' WILL HAVE DIRE CONSEQUENCES

Living conditions in the town further deteriorated as winter set in. Electricity is non-existent and many people use what is left of their destroyed homes for heating purposes, the report said.

Local sources said food prices were up dramatically since the regime’s blockade began. A kilogram of rice reportedly costs around $115 now.

The U.S. State Department said the U.S. was aware of the devastating situation.

“The regime is using starvation as a tool, a tactic of war. It’s pretty heart-rending, and frankly, it’s despicable,” said agency spokesman John Kirby.

The victims’ situation was more proof of the brutality of the Assad regime and its lack of legitimacy, Kirby said, while reiterating the need for a political and peaceful solution in Syria.

Also Read:  US AND ISRAEL 'FOUNDED ON TERRORISM AND GENOCIDE': RESEARCHER

“What we’re seeing gives us a renewed sense of urgency to move this process forward and it’s just all the more proof that it’s vital that Vienna process not be derailed by the current tensions in the region,” he said.

Samir Tateen, a local member of the Syrian coordination committee, said around 70 people have died of starvation and another 50 have passed away of various diseases in the past six months.

Some 4.5 million people live in hard-to-reach areas across Syria, with nearly 400,000 of them in besieged zones with little or no access to basic supplies or assistance, according to UN figures. (T/P006/R07)

Also Read:  UNICEF DELIVERS AID IN SYRIA FOR FIRST TIME IN TWO YEARS

Mi’raj Islamic News Agency (MINA)