Five
starve, dozens more at risk, in Syria's besieged Madaya: U.N.
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[January 18, 2016]
GENEVA (Reuters) - Five people have
starved to death in the last week in the Syrian town of Madaya, where a
single biscuit sells for $15 and baby milk costs $313 per kilo, despite
two emergency United Nations aid deliveries to the besieged town, a UN
report said.
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Local relief workers have reported 32 deaths of starvation in the
past month, and last week two convoys of aid supplies were delivered
to the 42,000 people living under a months-long blockade.
Dozens more people need immediate specialized medical care outside
Madaya if they are to survive, but aid workers from the U.N. and
Syrian Arab Red Crescent have managed to evacuate only 10 people,
the report said.
"Since 11 January, despite the assistance provided, five people
reportedly died of severe and acute malnutrition in Madaya," said
the U.N. humanitarian report, published late on Sunday.
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said on Thursday Syria's warring
parties, particularly President Bashar al-Assad's government, were
committing "atrocious acts" and he condemned the use of starvation
as a weapon of war in the nearly five-year-old conflict.
 The United Nations says there are some 450,000 people trapped in
around 15 sieges across Syria, including in areas controlled by the
government, Islamic State militants and other insurgent groups.
The U.N. made seven requests in 2015 to bring an aid convoy to the
town, and got permission to deliver aid for 20,000 people in
October, the report said. After several more requests, the Syrian
government allowed a life-saving aid delivery on Jan. 11 and another
on Jan. 14.
About 50 people left the town on Jan. 11, the report said. The
U.N. has asked Syria to allow the evacuation of a number of others
needing immediate care, it said.
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Syrian government forces and their allies have surrounded Madaya and
neighboring Bqine since July 2015 and imposed increasingly strict
conditions on freedom of movement.
The U.N. said the humanitarian workers who entered the town last
week heard that landmines had been laid since late September to stop
people leaving, but many civilians continued to try to search for
food on the outskirts, and some had lost limbs in landmine
explosions.
The controls on movement also meant many children had been separated
from their parents, leading to symptoms of trauma and behavioral
disorders.
Chairs and desks in schools are being used as firewood and there
have been unconfirmed reports of women being harassed at military
checkpoints and of gender-based violence, the U.N. said.
(Reporting by Tom Miles; Editing by Dominic Evans)
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