A quarter of a million Syrian children living under siege: Report

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At least 250,000 Syrian children are living under siege, with many forced to eat animal feed or leaves to survive, where less than 1 percent of people had received United Nations food last year and only 3 percent received health assistance, Save the Children said March 9, as the war's fifth anniversary looms.

"There are regularly stories of children dying because they couldn't get the emergency aid and medical care that they needed," Sonia Khush, Save the Children's regional Syria director, told reporters. 

According to the United Nations, some 486,700 people live in besieged areas - 274,200 people in areas besieged by the government, 200,000 in areas besieged by Islamic State and 12,500 people in areas besieged by opposition groups. 

"They and their families are cut off from the outside world, surrounded by warring groups that illegally use siege against civilians as a weapon of war," the charity said in a report.

"At least a quarter of a million children are living under brutal siege in areas of Syria that have effectively been turned into open-air prisons," it added.

With doctors operating without electricity and "sick children dying while the medicine they need is on the other side of a checkpoint," the report paints a grim picture based on the testimonies of families, aid workers, medics and teachers in besieged areas.

Doctors working in a rebel bastion east of Damascus have seen children die from preventable diseases.

"Some deaths resulted from malnutrition and others from the lack of medications and vaccines. Children here have died of rabies because the vaccine was not available," said one only identified as Dr Nizar.

Obstetric care is often non-existent in besieged areas like in the...

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