UN: 'Senseless human
suffering' must end in East Ghouta
UN warns bombardment
must stop as more than 100 civilians killed in regime attacks on rebel-held
area east of Damascus.
The United Nations says it is alarmed by "the extreme
escalation in hostilities" in Syria's Eastern Ghouta and called for
"immediate" end to the bombardment of the rebel-held area that has
left more than 100 people dead since Sunday.
"The recent escalation of violence compounds an already
precarious humanitarian situation," Panos Moumtzis, the UN's regional
humanitarian coordinator for the Syria crisis, said in a statement on Tuesday.
"It's imperative to end this senseless human suffering
now. Such targeting of innocent civilians and infrastructure must stop
now."
At least 20 children are among those killed in the incessant
air raids and artillery fired by Syrian government forces on the Damascus
suburb home to some 400,000 people, according to the Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights (SOHR).
Over 300 people have suffered wounds, the London-based monitoring
group said on Tuesday.
The attack that began on Sunday reportedly marks an upcoming
ground assault, which will soon be launched by the government, the SOHR said.
Eastern Ghouta is last remaining rebel-held area east of
Damascus, and has been under siege by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's forces
since 2013.
The UN and other rights organisations have continuously
called for a permanent ceasefire and for the government to lift the
"crippling" blockade.
As a result of the tight siege, aid convoys have not been
able to deliver much of the desperately needed food and medical supplies, and
overall access to the enclave remains "woefully inadequate".
On February 14, a convoy's deliveries reached only 2.6
percent of the estimated 272,500 people in need of humanitarian aid, according
to Ali al-Za'tari, the UN's humanitarian coordinator in Syria.
"The lack of access has led to severe food shortages and
a sharp rise in food prices," he said.
"Malnutrition rates have now reached unprecedented
levels, with 11.9 percent of children under five years old acutely malnourished
– the highest rate recorded in Syria since the beginning of the crisis."
In an apparent bid to lessen fighting last year, Eastern
Ghouta was classified as a "de-escalation" zone by the Syrian
government and its allies - including Russia, Iran and Turkey. But violence has
continued despite the truce agreement.
Syria's other de-escalation zones include parts of the
northeastern province of Idlib, areas in northern Homs province, and
rebel-controlled territory in the south near the border with Jordan.
Despite the agreement, nearly 300 people have been killed in
Eastern Ghouta and Idlib since the beginning of this month.
Now in its seventh year, the Syrian Civil War has killed
hundreds of thousands of people, and has forced millions to flee the country.
Response:
When looking at this article it is important to reorganize
the importance and seriousness of this topic and situation. The people involved
in this article have been persistent in knowing the exact statistics of the
deaths of the people in the air raids. There have been many deaths, but maybe
over enacted. This often happens when an author is trying convey a point. The author
is definitely against the air raids and has high disputes about it, which the
author should be. When looking at the article it is clear that I am unaware of
the situation, and I am not familiar with the topic; but at first glance my bias
would go against the air raids in Ghouta. The targeted audience is for the
people of Ghouta, to inform them of what is happening, and for the UN so that
they may be informed as well.
Citation:
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2018/02/senseless-human-suffering-east-ghouta-180220064101130.html
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