I’m a Syrian and a Humanitarian: What 13 years of conflict really looks like

Source: Save The Children

Weam*, 8 and his mother Feryal* in a tent reading a book together. Hand in Hand / Save The Children.

This story was originally published by The New Humanitarian.

Thirteen years since the conflict in my home of Syria began, the country bears little resemblance to the place where I grew up. The protracted conflict has also skewed the way the world – and those who fund humanitarian assistance in Syria – see the country, preventing aid workers like me from providing the kind of help that millions of people need.

More people need humanitarian assistance in the country than ever before during the war. This figure of 16.7 million, nearly 80% of the population, is rising, and what people need is shifting. But the aid system I work in refuses to change: It remains a Band-Aid on a gaping wound, offering temporary relief without addressing root causes. And these days, given severe funding shortages and the sheer scale of need, we are not even able to offer Band-Aids.
A few weeks ago, my colleagues in Syria told me about a group of children they had just met, who were retaking the sixth grade, over and over again: not because they weren’t learning or passing their exams, but because they don’t have access to secondary education, and their options are to stay in the same school or work, at a young age. These children are trapped in a failing education system, and the aid sector is not set up to help them.
Growing up in Syria, my childhood was far from this bleak reality. My father, a doctor, was able to send us to school and provide us with a comfortable home. Today, a doctor’s monthly salary in Damascus is equivalent to $26, which is barely enough to cover the cost of transportation to and from work.
The landscape of aid work in Syria is also undeniably entangled with political complexities and economic realities. Major donors have stipulated that political change in Syria is necessary if they are to fund reconstruction or development aid, at the same time as they are less willing to give money at all.
This means that without any momentum towards genuine peace, aid workers and the people we serve are stuck in a cycle. We can’t provide anything other than “light touch rehabilitation” to destroyed homes, instead of the substantial repairs that are truly needed.
But there is a place between emergency relief and full-fledged reconstruction, and that place is early recovery. This isn’t about supporting one side of the war or another. It is about making sure that children are safe, that they have access to basic services, and that they can live with some sort of dignity and respect wherever they are in the country, regardless of who controls the part of Syria they live in.

Marah* (11) smiling during a lesson in school with her friends Nour (12) and Niveen (12). Bonyan / Save The Children

Early recovery

For years, Save the Children, alongside other aid organisations, has advocated for increased investment in “early recovery” efforts in Syria, even though it has become caught up in the political conversation about “reconstruction.
This is a type of aid that is defined as “humanitarian” and not “development,” prioritising sustainable solutions that empower communities to help themselves, and foster resilience. Like teacher training or supporting communities to repair playgrounds and schools. That is what early recovery is supposed to do.
But so much of the time, we can’t even do this. The sad reality is that Syria’s conflict is far from over. Since last October, dozens of people have been killed and at least 120,000 forcibly displaced by violence, in the most significant escalation in years.
For early recovery to work, basic infrastructure needs to be in place, giving us something to build off. It relies on an electricity grid, piped water, and functioning markets. But for more than a decade now, Syrians have endured declining basic services. Damage to power stations, coupled with fuel shortages for those still functional, have plunged entire cities and villages into prolonged blackouts. In some areas, households are lucky if they have electricity for more than 30 minutes per day. 
We are watching the basic elements of a successful early recovery, and a future transition into development, collapse around us. Syrians are in economic freefall, with 90% of people struggling to buy essentials.
I am watching this, and experiencing this, as one of the 13 million Syrians who were forced or chose to leave over the last 13 years, becoming refugees or displaced people. My phone is regularly flooded with heartbreaking requests from relatives or friends-of-friends struggling back home.
Even those not caught up in the violence are being squeezed by the economic crisis, with aid workers sending photos of empty refrigerators, while parents are making the difficult choice to send children on perilous journeys across the Mediterranean Sea to make it to Europe.

 

Time for a change

There are moments when Syria’s unresolved political situation, and the way it impacts aid, are far too clear.
Last year, when earthquakes hit southern Türkiye and northern Syria, killing more than 56,000 people, the international community was slow to respond in Syria. During the subsequent pledging conference asking for donors to chip in, the language used reflected very distinct priorities.
For Türkiye, the emphasis was on rebuilding infrastructure, ensuring fully functional hospitals, and creating job opportunities to enable affected individuals to rebuild their lives and support their families.
In contrast, the discussion regarding Syria highlighted the fact that the earthquake had exacerbated an existing humanitarian crisis, underscoring the already urgent need for funding. There was no talk of rebuilding, or even helping people get back on their feet. There wasn’t much discussion of early recovery, either.
Saleh* 15, wearing his crutches and holding a Choose Love drawing, Syria.Hand in Hand / Save The Children.
Beyond the jargon, this matters to real families. Thousands of children, like 15-year-old Saleh, who have never known Syria beyond the conflict. His family was uprooted to a camp after his father died, and some of my colleagues met him this winter.  
“I’ve [also] lost my sister, uncle and grandfather,” said Saleh, whose real name and location are not being published for his security.
He’s recovering from a bullet wound to his leg and dreams of becoming a doctor despite the slim educational pathways inside the camp. Kids like Saleh just want the things that they know children in other places have.
They want safe schools, with trained and paid teachers. If they get sick, they want to be able to go to a hospital with the right equipment and medicine to diagnose and treat them. They want their parents to have jobs that mean they can eat three meals a day, drink clean water, and heat their homes during the winter. In short, they want to be allowed to be children.  
If we do not start to do genuine early recovery, we are setting up a lifetime of aid dependency, of increased risk of insecurity and violence, malnutrition, early marriage, child labour, leaving migration as one of the few options available. 

 

The future

Some headway has been made in ensuring that donors and others know what early recovery is, what humanitarians want to do, and why it matters to children.
More donors are funding these activities, and the UN is working on a strategy that could – if it is genuinely inclusive – offer a real chance to collaborate with local communities, test out new ways of working, and do things differently.
But for this to work, we must make it clear to all sides in the war that attacking vital civilian infrastructure is unacceptable, and recommit to supporting a meaningful, inclusive peace process that allows Syrians to determine their own future.
They must do more to foster a space that is conducive for early recovery.
This means ensuring that sanctions, restrictions on exports, and counter-terrorism legislation do not limit our ability to do more. It means listening to UN experts and others who have warned, even before the earthquake, that sanctions are having a negative impact on economic recovery in all of Syria. This has the effect of collectively punishing the population.
As Syria enters its 14th year of conflict, the world is a polarised place. More conflict and climate change are likely to bring fresh displacement, and make global resources even more scant.
As a Syrian humanitarian, I do not want to plead year after year for a piece of a diminishing pot of funding. I do not want to beg to ensure that people are piped in clean water, or that hospitals have basic equipment, as the country collapses around me. I can’t ignore the fact that without a genuine transformation of our approach to Syria, we are condemning an entire country to live in aid dependency.
Tents in a displacement camp in Syria. Hand in Hand / Save The Children
We need to stop debating terminology and stop allowing politics to dictate what support Syrians are “allowed” to have from the international community. 
I don’t live in Syria anymore, and last year, I took my five-year-old son to my beloved hometown, Damascus. He looked around and said: “Syria is the worst country in the world. How can people live without electricity?” I had no answer. How can I explain the politics of the aid system today to him? Somehow, I hold on to the hope that someday he will come to appreciate this place as much as I do.
Syrians are running out of patience and running out of options. I am tired of having no good answer. While we wait for peace, humanitarians owe our children a better way of working, and the international community owes them a future. 

Support our humanitarian work in countries like Syria by donating today.

—–

Rasha Muhrez is a professional humanitarian with over 16 years in senior and leadership roles with International NGOs. Rasha has spent most of her career working in Africa and the Middle East in complex emergencies and countries in transition.  Including, Syria, Yemen, Niger, Sudan and South Sudan. In December she joined Save the Children as Syria Response Director to lead one of the world’s most complex humanitarian operations.  
Rasha holds a BSc in Economics from Damascus University, an MBA from Université Paris-Dauphine and an MBA for Executives from the Higher Institute of Business Administration in Damascus. She is passionate about the work she is doing with Save the Children and committed to be the voice for those who are most vulnerable and deprived of their rights.
The New Humanitarian puts quality, independent journalism at the service of the millions of people affected by humanitarian crises around the world. Find out more at www.thenewhumanitarian.org.

MORE THAN ONE MILLION CHILDREN TRAPPED AS GANG VIOLENCE RAGES IN HAITI

Source: Save The Children

PORT-AU-PRINCE, 14 March 2024 – More than one million children in Haiti – a quarter of the nation’s children – are living in areas controlled or under the influence of armed groups as violence spirals out of control, cutting families off from food and vital services, Save the Children said.  

Gang groups now control about 90% of Port-au-Prince and other urban areas have turned into “battlefields”, with a state of emergency declared in the country until 3 April.  

At least 200,000 children have been forced to flee their homes in the last two years, 96% due to violence or attacks.  In the past two weeks, the situation has worsened for children with many families forced from their homes and those trapped in the Port-au-Prince area struggling to cope as food supplies dwindle in the country.  

Nearly 277,000 children aged under five in Haiti are facing malnutrition – about 40% of whom reside in the Port-au-Prince metro region – as gang violence obstructs critical food supplies, according to the latest numbers from the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC)

Children living in areas impacted by gang violence are also at risk of armed recruitment and sexual violence. Critical health and social services are teetering on the edge of collapse in numerous departments of Haiti. Most health facilities are inaccessible due to the violence, leaving thousands of families and children without healthcare services. 

Chantal Imbeault, Save the Children’s Country Director in Haiti, said: 

“The situation in Haiti has gone from bad to an utter nightmare for millions of children in the country. Gangs are turning urban areas into battlefields. Families are living in constant fear, unable to leave their homes or access fresh food, clean water and urgent medical care. Children are unable to go to school and are at risk of recruitment by armed groups and sexual violence.  

“Every day, hundreds of children across the country are being forced from their homes. Many of these children have been displaced multiple times and are now facing some of the most severe abuses and violations to their lives and well-being ever witnessed in Haiti’s history.  

“A record three million children urgently need humanitarian aid in Haiti this year. Yet, our staff and other aid agencies are struggling to distribute aid as the violence continues to escalate in parts of the country. This violence must come to an end, or children will continue to pay the heaviest price.”  

All parties must do their utmost to protect children and abide by international humanitarian law. Save the Children is also calling on the international community to urgently increase humanitarian funding for the crisis in Haiti.  

Save the Children is working around the clock to support children who are trapped in a deadly cycle of violence, poverty and hunger. The child right’s organisation is providing cash so families can buy food and other essentials, and delivering health and nutrition support, including treating children for malnutrition and providing nutrition counselling to caregivers. Save the Children is also supporting children to access water, sanitation and hygiene facilities, to continue learning and ensuring they are protected from harm, exploitation and abuse. Save the Children has been working in Haiti since 1978, in both urban and rural communities.   

ENDS 

NOTES TO EDITORS: 

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For further enquiries please contact:

–          Samantha Halyk, Senior Global Media Manager, Samantha.halyk@savethechildren.org

–          Maria Gabriela Alvarado, Regional Media Manager, maria.alvarado@savethechildren.org

Our media out of hours (BST) contact is media@savethechildren.org.uk / +44(0)7831 650409

Please also check our Twitter account @Save_GlobalNews for news alerts, quotes, statements and location Vlogs.

INDONESIA: Floods force more than 15,000 children from their homes in Sumatra as Indonesia battles second climate crisis in a month

Source: Save The Children

Stack of hygiene kit boxes for residents affected by the flooding in Demak. February 19, 2024. Photo credit: Abid Amirullah / Save the Children

JAKARTA, 13 March 2024 – Flooding and landslides on the Indonesian island of Sumatra have affected about 15,500 children and 40,000 families, in the second major flooding disaster in Indonesia in a month, highlighting Indonesia’s vulnerability to climate change impacts, including extreme events such as droughts and floods, Save the Children said. 

About 40,000 families1 have been affected, including about 15,500 children,2 as more rain is expected in the coming days.  

At least 263 people have been killed on Sumatra with more than 11 still missing and about 77,0004 people have been evacuated following floods and landslides caused by torrential rain, leaving families and children in need of essential humanitarian aid. 

Heavy rain since last week triggered floods and landslides with 12 out of 19 districts in West Sumatra affected. 

This follows flooding last month in Central Java, about 1,200 kilometres (750 miles) away, that displaced about 11,500 people. Coastal areas in many parts of Indonesia are being threatened by rising sea levels caused by climate change, putting people in the world’s fourth-most-populous country at risk.

Indonesia’s monsoon season typically occurs between November and March, causing flash floods and landslides in the archipelago which consists of more than 17,000 islands.

However, the country’s national disaster agency has said that more than 90 % of the country’s natural disasters over the past decade have been exacerbated by climate change.5  

Indonesia’s sizable coastal population that lives in low lying areas are particularly vulnerable to the impacts of flooding and rising sea levels and Indonesia ranks in the top third of countries in the world6 that are most at risk to climate hazards including heatwaves, flooding, and droughts.  

Dozens of bridges, roads, houses, and schools in West Sumatra province have been damaged, hampering rescue operations this week.  

Save the Children Indonesia, together with local partner Yayasan Jamari Sakato, is sending supplies to affected locations including food, clean water, shelter kits, hygiene kits, clothes, bedding and medicine.  

Fadli Usman, Humanitarian Director at Save the Children in Indonesia, said:   

“Children are already bearing the brunt of the climate crisis and the extreme weather that it brings. We need to see urgent action now in Indonesia and around the world to limit global warming to a maximum of 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels. Failing to do this will see dramatic consequences for children’s health, safety, & wellbeing. Our team is now preparing assistance to meet the basic needs of children, such as temporary shelter and food and medical treatment but we know that we need longer term solutions to avoid more disasters like this.” 

Jemari Sakato is a local humanitarian organization based in West Sumatra, dedicated to promoting community participation and governance. Jemari Sakato is one of Save the Children Indonesia’s humanitarian action partners and helps to address the evolving needs of the children and community since 2022. 

Sudan: Nearly 230,000 children and new mothers likely to die from hunger without critical action – Save the Children

Source: Save The Children

KHARTOUM, 13 March 2024 – Nearly 230,000 children, pregnant women and new mothers could die in the coming months due to hunger unless urgent, life-saving funding is released to respond to the massive and worsening crisis in Sudan, Save the Children said.

More than 2.9 million children in Sudan are acutely malnourished and an additional 729,000 children under five are suffering from severe acute malnutrition – the most dangerous and deadly form of extreme hunger, according to new figures released by the Nutrition Cluster in Sudan–a partnership of organisations including the UN, Federal Ministry of Health, and NGOs including Save the Children. 

Of these children, more than 109,000 are likely to have medical complications like dehydration, hypothermia and hypoglycemia, which requires intensive and specialized care at a hospital to survive.

According to the Cluster, about 222,000 severely malnourished children and more than 7,000 new mothers are likely to die in coming months if their nutritional and health needs remain unmet. This grim projection is based on the current funding levels for the emergency feeding programme in Sudan, which at the moment only covers 5.5% of the total needs in the country. In contrast, the emergency feeding programme last year was 23% funded – still a fraction of the funding required, but substantially more than now.

Without addressing the funding gap, about 1.2 million pregnant and breastfeeding women will suffer from malnutrition this year and face severe health complications during and after delivery. Save the Children nutrition experts have reported seeing pregnant women skipping meals and going to bed hungry to allow their children to eat, severely restricting the nutrients available to their growing fetuses and creating grave concerns for the health of these babies when born.

The figures released today reveal a stark deterioration in the ability for humanitarian organisations to reach people in need, with an unprecedented lack of funding and critical lack of access.  In just one month, the number of areas deemed “hard-to-reach” by the Cluster increased by 71% from 47 in November 2023 to 135 by the end of December due to increased fighting.

Destruction of the in-country supply chain for ready to use therapeutic foods – critical for treating severely malnourished children – has also severely hampered the aid response to the crisis. In particular, the only manufacturer of the food needed for rehabilitating children and women with severe acute malnutrition is no longer operational after it was destroyed last year during fighting. 

Since the conflict escalated in April 2023, food production has crashed, imports have stalled, and staple food prices have soared by 45% in under a year. Movement of food across the country, particularly to rural and remote areas where most people live, have also been severely restricted due to conflict, driving more than 37% of the population into above crisis levels of hunger.

Dr. Arif Noor, Country Director for Save the Children in Sudan, said:

“The nutrition situation – the ability for children and other vulnerable groups to get the food they need in order to grow and survive – in Sudan is one of the worst in the world. No planting last year means no food today. No planting today means no food tomorrow. The cycle of hunger is getting worse and worse with no end in sight – only more misery.

In December, Al-Jazirah state, once the country’s breadbasket, witnessed intense fighting leading to a new wave of displacement with more than half a million people fleeing their homes in search of safety. This has led to an unprecedented disruption of food systems.

We are seeing massive hunger, suffering and death. And yet the world looks away. The international community must come together to act and prevent more lives being lost. History will remember this inaction.”

Sudan is facing one of the largest unfolding crises globally. About 25 million people – of whom over 14 million are children – need humanitarian assistance and support. That is every second person in Sudan needing assistance to meet their basic needs [OCHA]

Save the Children is calling on the international community to commit the funding and resources to prepare for a large-scale response to meet critical needs both in Sudan and in neighbouring countries, including to local and national organisations providing frontline response.  The child rights organisation is also calling for an end to the conflict and unfettered humanitarian access so that we can provide families and children with life-saving food, health and other vital basic services and supplies. 

Save the Children has worked in Sudan since 1983, and currently Save the Children is supporting children and their families across Sudan providing health, nutrition, education, child protection and food security and livelihoods support. Save the Children is also supporting refugees from Sudan in Egypt and South Sudan.

ENDS

[1] Sudan Nutrition Cluster Messages, 26 February 2024.

[2] FEWSNET: Sudan Food Security Alert: February 1st, 2024

Note to Editors

There are 729, 000 children with severe acute malnutrition in Sudan. Of these 109,000 have medical complications and 90% of them are likely to die (98,000). The remaining 620,000 children (729,000- 109,000) have severe acute malnutrition with no medical complication and 20% (124,000) of them are likely to die.

At least 1.2 million women are malnourished in Sudan. Malnourished women have twice the risk of death compared to well-nourished women, according to a recent review of scientific studies (2023). The UN reports 295 maternal deaths per 100 000 livebirths in Sudan. This means at least 7080 malnourished women are likely to die this year. The number of malnourished women likely to die as per UN figure on maternal deaths is multiplied by two as malnourished women in Sudan are twice as likely to die compared to well-nourished women.   

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For further enquiries please contact: Delfhin Mugo   delfhin.mugo@savethechildren.org

“We are exhausted searching for water” – Indigenous children battle hunger, disease and water shortages, as Colombia feels the impact of El Nino

Source: Save The Children

BOGOTA, 12 March 2024 – The devastating impact of the climate crisis on children in Colombia’s largest indigenous group, the Wayuu, is illustrated in this powerful series of photographs by Sony award winning photographer Angela Ponce released by Save the Children. 

For centuries, the group have lived off the land, but a series of crippling droughts, soaring temperatures, and the onset of El Nino have devastated the environment which is central to their culture and survival.

The arrival of the weather phenomenon El Nino in Colombia in November 2023[1] has resulted in record high temperatures and low rainfall, further exacerbating drought conditions and putting children’s lives at risk.  One million children in the country are expected to have been impacted by the effects of El Nino[2], of which Wayuu children are the most vulnerable as they are already suffering from chronic malnutrition and a lack of access to water.

Only one in 30 Wayuu children living in rural areas has access to clean water. [3] The water that is available is often taken from a “jaguey”, a natural aquifer which is reliant on rainwater and shared with livestock. This results in regular occurrences of diarrhoea and other waterborne diseases among children who are forced to drink the water.

Communities now struggle to sow crops because of the prolonged drought, resulting in widespread hunger which threatens the lives of Wayuu children. Last year 70 children lost their lives in the La Guajira region[4], which is an average of five young lives per month. The mortality rate for malnutrition amongst Wayuu children is over six times the national average.

The photographer Angela Ponce spent a week with a small community in the very north of the country in La Guajira meeting with children and their families, capturing daily life, traditions of their ancient culture and the impact of the climate crisis.

The children also learnt to develop their own images relying only on the power of the sun, through the process of “Cyanotype” printing, to symbolise the environmental challenges they face. Each artwork has a distinctive blue hue illustrating the desperate need for water in their community, and the indigenous plants that are vital for their survival.

Iveth, 16, who lives in a small Wayuu community in La Guajria said: Here, the Wayuu, suffers from the lack of water. It can´t be found, as the weather is changing there aren’t seasons anymore.” 

“We used to go to the pond (for water), but it´s dry and muddy, so it is not healthy for us or the animals to drink. The water is far away, and to walk under this heat.

“Before we had orchards, it rained, the plants grew. We didn´t water the plants, the rain did. Now there´s no rain, the weather has changed so we can´t sow.

“What I wish for the future is my community´s well-being. For them to benefit from things like school, water, sowing… and for us to be healthy and the children don’t die. You know children are dying too often.”

Jamer, 12, is worried by the impact of El Nino and the changing climate. He is exhausted by the constant search for fresh water, often walking for miles in the searing heat of the desert just to find water for his family.

“We are very affected by the El Niño phenomenon because it has not rained…..our crops die, we suffer and then we are forced to look for water from far away where the jagüey (watering hole) is and we get tired with the wheelbarrow. It’s hard. What we sow dies, we are exhausted searching for water.

“We need water, what we drink is the polluted water from the pit (jagüey), where the donkeys drink and even urinate.”

Shruti Agarwal, Senior Advisor on Climate Change from Save the Children, said:

“The climate crisis hits the most vulnerable the hardest, and it is children who are paying the highest price for our lack of action. 

“Hundreds of millions of people in Indigenous communities across the world, like the children featured in these powerful photographs, are already experiencing the devastating impacts of climate change on their way of life, means of making a living, and fundamental human rights. Even though they contribute the least to greenhouse gas emissions.”

The children involved in the project are all part of a Save the Children programme to educate the Wayuu community about climate change and promote resilience. Save the Children’s programmes have empowered the children, teaching them valuable skills such as painting, filming, and addressing vital topics like waste management and deforestation.

Save the Children is raising the alarm that extreme weather events are becoming more frequent in lower income countries as a result of the climate crisis. This means the poorest families in these countries are less able to protect themselves when climate shocks occur in comparison to richer countries. The organisation calls for higher-income countries such as the UK to increase climate funding, to support lower-income countries, who are on the sharp end of the crisis.

Notes to Editors

IMAGES HERE:  www.contenthubsavethechildren.org/Package/2O4C2S3MZNYC

INTERVIEWS & BROLL: www.contenthubsavethechildren.org/Package/2O4C2S39MSB2

For more information and media inquiries, please contact Simon Edmunds at s.edmunds@savethechildren.org.uk or +447515855180.


[2] https://www.acaps.org/fileadmin/Data_Product/Main_media/20240124_ACAPS_Colombia_analysis_hub_El_Nino_in_Magdalena_Medio.pdf

[3] Constitutional Court Sentence T-302 2017 p.51.

[4] https://colombiareports.com/at-least-233-children-died-of-hunger-in-colombia-in-2023/

“Complete psychological destruction”: Children in Gaza have suffered “relentless mental harm” during five months of war – Save the Children

Source: Save The Children


Photo by Bisan Owda/Save the Children 

RAMALLAH, 12 MARCH 2024 – Five months of violence, displacement, starvation and disease on top of nearly 17 years of a blockade have caused relentless mental harm to children in Gaza, Save the Children said today. Parents and caregivers told the child rights organisation that children’s capacity to even imagine a future without war has virtually disappeared. 

The emotional distress of dodging bombs and bullets, losing loved ones, being forced to flee through streets littered with debris and corpses, and waking up every morning not knowing if they will be able to eat has also left parents and caregivers increasingly unable to cope. The support, services and tools they need to care for their children are further and further out of reach.   

In findings published today, Dalia*, a mother in Gaza, said: “Our children have already lived through different wars. They already lacked resilience and now it’s very difficult to cope. The children are scared, angry and can’t stop crying. Even many adults do the same. This is too much for adults to cope with, let alone children.” 

The insights form an addendum to Save the Children research from 2022 charting the profound impacts of the Israeli Government’s then 15-years of blockade on the mental health of childreni

In the report, mental health and child protection experts working with Save the Children in Gaza said that without urgent action, starting with an immediate, definitive ceasefire and safe, unfettered humanitarian access, the war will inflict further lifelong detrimental mental harm, with rapidly shrinking opportunities to recover. 

Parents noted that children have given up on their hopes or ambitions for the future. 

Samer*, a father, said: “One of my sons dreamt of becoming an engineer and the other a policeman. Now one wants to drive a donkey cart – because he sees this reality […] [My other son’s] dream is selling biscuits in front of the house.” 

Amal*, a mother of four children in Gaza aged between 7 and 14, said: “Some of my children can’t concentrate on basic tasks anymore. They forget things that I’ve told them immediately and can’t remember things that have just happened. I wouldn’t even say that their mental health has deteriorated – it’s been obliterated. Complete psychological destruction.” 

The findings come as the Ministry of Health in Gaza reports that more than 30,717 people, including 12,550 children, have been killed since Israel’s military escalation in Gaza that started on 7 October* in retaliation to attacks on Israel killing 1200 people, including 33 children and taking more than 240 hostages, according to the Government of Israel.  

Lack of food and clean water is also creating a catastrophic hunger crisis, with nearly every child in Gaza at risk of famine. At least 15 children have died of malnutrition and dehydration in northern Gaza, according to Gaza’s Ministry of Health*. With barely any health facilities functioning and families cut off from medical services, it is likely that the real figure is far higher – and all this is causing anxiety and stress in children and families to skyrocket, Save the Children said.  

Even before 7 October, children in Gaza were living with exceptionally poor mental health due to cyclical escalations of violence, the impacts of the blockade including restrictions on freedom of movement and access to essential services, economic collapse, and separation from family and friends.  

Those surveyed for the new report said they had witnessed a dramatic deterioration in the mental health of children that is much worse than during previous escalations in violence, manifesting in fear, anxiety, disordered eating, bedwetting, hyper-vigilance and sleep problems as well as behavioural changes such as an alternation in attachment style with parents, regression and aggression.  

Waseem*, a father, said: “Children here have seen everything. They’ve seen the bombs, the deaths, the bodies – we can’t pretend to them any more. Now they understand and have seen everything. Now, my son can even tell what types of explosives are falling – he can hear the difference.” 

While needs are soaring, the latest escalation in violence and the siege have caused a total collapse of mental health services in Gaza, with the six public community mental health centres and Gaza’s only inpatient psychiatric hospital no longer functioning, Save the Children said.  

Jason Lee, Save the Children’s Country Director for the occupied Palestinian territory, said:  

“It is unacceptable that any child should contend with the horrors that those in Gaza have lived through. While dodging bombs and bullets, fleeing through streets littered with debris and corpses, being forced to sleep in the open air and going without the basic food and clean water they need to survive, children in Gaza are going through a period of mass-scale shock and grief.  

“Children in Gaza were already living with unimaginable distress following 16 years of blockade and successive escalations in violence. This war and the physical and mental scars it is leaving on children is further eroding their resilience.  

“There is still hope that, with adequate support, this can be reversed. Throughout childhood, there are critical windows of opportunity to address the impact of conflict. But none of this is possible without an immediate, definitive ceasefire and safe, unfettered aid access so that humanitarians can provide the critical support needed.”  

Save the Children is calling for an immediate, definitive ceasefire to save and protect the lives of children in Gaza and effective implementation of the provisional measures from the ICJ, and has called on the Government of Israel to allow the unfettered flow of aid and the resumption of entry of commercial goods into Gaza to prevent children from dying of starvation and disease.   

Save the Children is also calling for all donor governments and the rest of the international community to resume and scale up funding for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) on which the aid response in Gaza depends as quickly as possible.    

Save the Children has been providing essential services and support to Palestinian children impacted by the ongoing conflict since 1953. Save the Children’s team in the occupied Palestinian territory has been working around the clock, prepositioning vital supplies to support people in need, and working to find ways to get assistance into Gaza.     

 

ENDS  

NOTES TO EDITORS  

  • You can read the Trapped and Scarred addendum here
  • In this paper Save the Children consulted with four partners in Gaza, who were providing Child Protection services before the war. Save the Children also spoke to four parents and caregivers in Gaza about the psychosocial wellbeing, behaviour, and coping mechanisms of their children since the escalation.  
  • For the same research, in the West Bank, 32 children (17 girls, 15 boys) were consulted about how hearing dehumanising language about Palestinians impacts their mental health. They said that regularly hearing dehumanising language from Israeli government officials about Palestinians is also impacting their mental health, and they reported feeling pain, anger, weakness and that “nobody wants us to exist on the planet.” 
  •  Key Informant Interviews were also carried out with Mental Health professionals based in the region, a Child Rights Organisation, and the Palestinian Commission of Detainees based in Ramallah.   
  • The insights follow from Save the Children’s reports from 2018 and 2022 looking into the impact of blockade on the mental health of children in Gaza. 
  • Due to the current level of hostilities and insecurity, as well as the restrictions on providing meaningful follow-up support to children, Save the Children regrets that it is not practical to meaningfully and responsibly conduct research on a larger scale. 
  • Children can be more vulnerable to certain mental health stressors such as traumatic experiences, conflict, or significant changes in their environment, due to their ongoing development and limited coping mechanisms. As such, any mental (and physical) harm inflicted on children must be interpreted in line with their distinctive needs and vulnerabilities.  

 

*as of 7 March 2024 

ENDS

For media enquiries please contact:

Emily Wight, Emily.Wight@savethechildren.org;

Randa Ghazy, Randa.Ghazy@savethechildren.org;

For out of hours media (GMT) contact media@savethechildren.org.uk / +44(0)7831 650409

Five tips on how to talk to children about war

Source: Save The Children

The situation of the world right now can be daunting and stressful for anyone, but especially for children.

With conflicts and wars taking over daily news coverage, children in your life have probably approached you with tough questions, and looking for answers and explanations to their worries.

We understand talking about war can be a complex and distressing topic, but taking the time to listen and talk to them about their worries will help them feel more calm and in control.

Our team of child psychologists have created this guide with five tips on how to make these conversations a little easier.

1. Make time and listen

Give children the space to talk then they want to – even if you’re in the middle of something else!

Encourage them to tell you what they know, how they feel and to ask you questions. 

Hamid* (12) has received psychosocial support from a Save the Children clinic in Al Gezira State, Sudan. Mosaab Hassouna / Save the Children

2. Tailor the conversation to the child

Older children will need more details while younger ones may be satisfied just by understanding that countries fight. 

Be informed, stay calm and answer questions honestly. 

Begin with simple information as too much detail may overwhelm them and cause anxiety.

3. Validate their feelings

Speak to the child about how they feel.

It is important that children feel supported in the conversation. They should not feel judged or have their concerns dismissed. 

When children have the chance to have an open and honest conversation about things upsetting them, they can feel relieved.

 Olena*(4) plays in the sports area in the bomb shelter of her kindergarten in Ukraine. Anastasiia Zahoskina/Save the Children

4. Reassure them

Remind them this crisis is not their problem to solve. Adults all over the world are working hard to fix the situation. 

They shouldn’t feel guilty playing, seeing their friends and doing the things that make them feel happy. 

5. Give them a practical way to help

For example they could start fundraisers, write letters to local decision-makers or create drawings calling for peace. 

Children who have the opportunity to help can feel like they are part of the solution instead of feeling hopeless.

Following the February earthquake, a group of children draw during a psychosocial support session in Türkiye. Osman Yıldız / Save the Children Türkiye

We all want our children to have a sense of safety, a feeling of calm, and hope for the future. If you liked this article and found it useful, save it and share it with family and friends as a handy resource for when children need support and hope.

LEARN MORE ABOUT HOW WE SUPPORT CHILDREN LIVING THROUGH CRISES.

Alternative aid delivery in Gaza: children do not have time to wait – Save the Children

Source: Save The Children

Photo by Bisan/Save the Children

RAMALLAH, 8 MARCH 2024 – Children in Gaza dying from starvation and disease cannot wait for the time it may take to build a temporary port off the Strip, or for the hope that aid dropped out of planes will reach them, Save the Children said.  

While welcoming efforts to provide more aid into Gaza, these alternative methods of aid delivery are costly, inefficient, and a distraction from the critical solution to save the lives of children and families in Gaza: an immediate, definitive ceasefire and safe, unfettered humanitarian aid access through all border crossings and within the Strip.   

So far, the Ministry of Health in Gaza has recorded 18 child and two adult deaths from malnutrition and dehydration. With healthcare facilities barely functioning and only a minority of families able to access any services, this is the tip of the iceberg, Save the Children said. In February, Save the Children reported that families were forced to forage for scraps of food left by rats and eat leaves out of desperation to survive. 

Jason Lee, Country Director for Save the Children in the occupied Palestinian territory, said: 

Children in Gaza cannot wait to eat. They are already dying from malnutrition and saving their lives is a matter of hours or days – not weeks.  

“The denial of humanitarian assistance is a Grave Violation against children and is against international humanitarian law. For months, we have been calling for safe, unfettered access throughout all of Gaza.  

“There is already a tried and tested system in place to effectively co-ordinate aid, but trucks of food and medicines that could save lives are waiting at crossings, while children are starving just miles away. Airdrops, with no on-the-ground co-ordination of who it reaches, and maritime corridors like the one announced yesterday are no solutions to keep children alive. Neither are substitutes for unimpeded humanitarian assistance via the established land routes. 

“The Government of Israel and members of the international community must facilitate immediate entry of both humanitarian and commercial goods across all available border crossings, and throughout the Gaza strip. 

“For children in Gaza, every minute counts. We need a definitive ceasefire now, and in the meantime, we need immediate unhindered humanitarian access across all available routes.” 

 

ENDS  

Save the Children is calling for an immediate, definitive ceasefire to save and protect the lives of children in Gaza and effective implementation of the provisional measures from the ICJ, and has called on the Government of Israel to allow the unfettered flow of aid and the resumption of entry of commercial goods into Gaza to prevent children from dying of starvation and disease.     

Save the Children is also calling for all donor governments and the rest of the international community to resume and scale up funding for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) on which the aid response in Gaza depends as quickly as possible.    

Save the Children has been providing essential services and support to Palestinian children impacted by the ongoing conflict since 1953. Save the Children’s team in the occupied Palestinian territory has been working around the clock, prepositioning vital supplies to support people in need, and working to find ways to get assistance into Gaza.     

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For media enquiries please contact:

Emily Wight, Emily.Wight@savethechildren.org;

Randa Ghazy, Randa.Ghazy@savethechildren.org;

For out of hours media (GMT) contact media@savethechildren.org.uk / +44(0)7831 650409

Cousins campaigning against child marriage hope village laws go national in Sierra Leone

Source: Save The Children

Cousins Kpemeh*, 18 and Kuji*, 19 walk home hand in hand in Kailahun, Sierra Leone. More content available here

FREETOWN, 8 March 2024 – When 19-year-old Kuji* managed to stop her cousin Kpemeh’s* marriage at age 15 and she returned to school, the girls hoped it would set an example for others in their village in rural eastern Sierra Leone. Now it seems their campaigning could help girls nationwide. 

Kpemeh* was only 12 when a man expressed interest in marrying her. Her parents, whose farming just covers the family’s immediate needs, felt financial pressure and agreed to the marriage. But Kpemeh* was adamantly opposed to such a union. She knew she was not ready, and her education was too important to her.  

Kpemeh* resisted the marriage for three years after which her parents stopped paying her school fees and she had to drop out.  

While visiting relatives in a nearby village, Kpemeh*’s cousin Kuji* heard about her situation. Kuji* is an early child marriage champion with Save the Children and encouraged her cousin to stand up for her rights and for her education. Kuji* also reported the case to the village chief, who fined Kpemeh*’s parents and prevented the marriage.  

While Kpemeh* escaped early marriage, many girls in Sierra Leone are not so fortunate. About one third of girls in Sierra Leone are married before the age of 18, and another one third give birth before age 19, according to a report by the Ministry of Health. Sierra Leone has one of the highest child marriage, early pregnancy, and maternal mortality rates in the world, with 443 mothers dying in every 100,000 live births.  Adolescent mothers are at particular risk of birth and pregnancy complications. 

Both now trained as Save the Children champions,  Kpemeh* and Kuji* have jointly campaigned against child marriage, and last year all the chiefs in Kailahun district in eastern Sierra Leone unanimously agreed to criminalise child marriage, making it punishable with fines and other penalties. Save the Children also set up a toll-free phone number to report any suspected cases of child marriage.  

Kpemeh* said: I will say to [people in the community] that there is this project that I am part of, I am here to advise you about early child marriage. Those of us who are under 18 should steer clear of early marriage. Whenever I share this message, people listen and abandon such practices.” 

An historic bill based on the village’s bylaws will soon be introduced to the Sierra Leone parliament which, if passed, would criminalise child marriage, including promoting, attending, or abetting one. The bill would also nullify any existing law that supports child marriage. 

Another trained campaigner, Ibrahim*, 23, recalled attitudes before the Save the Children-led training on child marriage.  

Ibrahim said: “Early marriage was happening, but we saw it as something good because we didn’t know. It’s so frequent. A soon as we see a friend get married, then someone would say I am going to get married. Or if a girl brags about her pregnancy, her friend would also say I will get pregnant too. 

“But after being explained the negative effects, we realised it’s not good… so, we spoke to our friends, so they can stop doing it [early marriage]. It’s child abuse… and they should stop it.” 

Ibrahim started visiting children who were not attending school and were susceptible to child marriage. By listening to children and families without judgment, and by stressing the importance of education, Ibrahim has seen a huge increase in school attendance in his village and the exam pass rate jumped to 95% from 60-70%. 

Paramount Chief Henry H. Baion III said: 

“Paramount Chiefs, including me, in this chiefdom were guilty of supporting child marriage [before]. When the programme came, I was sceptical about the concept and supported reluctantly. As I got to understand what it was about, I realised it is something good for our community and children.” 

Communities, like those in Kailahun, are leading the charge against child marriage. At the national level, Save the Children has worked with First Lady Fatima Maada Bio, the Ministry of Gender and Children’s Affairs, and other organisations to end child marriage in the country.  

Save the Children is calling for the government of Sierra Leone to see this bill become law and protect the future of children.  

 Patrick Analo, Save the Children Sierra Leone Country Director said: 

“Child marriage effectively stops a girl’s childhood. It not only violates her rights, but also puts her life at risk. Girls who are married young are less likely to continue with their education, leading to lifelong economic impacts for them, their families, and communities. We are encouraged by the work done in the community level in Kailahun and call for these local bylaws to be made nationwide.” 

Save the Children has been working in Sierra Leone since 1999, initially focusing on family reunification during the war. Now the organisation’s primary areas of focus are children’s rights and protection, education, and health. 

ENDS 

For further enquiries please contact:

Anna Rauhanen anna.rauhanen@savethechildren.org

Kunle Olawoyin Kunle.Olawoyin@savethechildren.org

Our media out of hours (BST) contact is media@savethechildren.org.uk / +44(0)7831 650409

International Women’s Day: Save the Children, the LEGO Group and the LEGO Foundation launch new initiative to empower Girls to become Unstoppable Women

Source: Save The Children

COPENHAGEN: 8 March 2024: A new ‘Girls Unstoppable’ programme has its sights on freeing up girls in China, Indonesia, Mexico and Vietnam from chores and care work and getting them into girls clubs to meet, play, and gain confidence to campaign about issues important to them.

Launching on International Women’s Day, the programme by the LEGO Group, the LEGO Foundation and Save the Children will directly support over 10,000 girls aged between 10 and 13 by setting up clubs and workshops where they can learn how to advocate for their rights.

Girls are often discouraged from being outspoken or ambitious, whilst boys are encouraged and rewarded for speaking up, according to Save the Children analysis from China, Indonesia, Mexico and Vietnam, June 2023. The analysis also showed that girls did more unpaid work in the home and were deprived of time to learn, play, and explore their creativity and build friendships.  Siska*, 13 from, East Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia said:

“My friends and I, especially the girls, have limited access to play. I have two friends from my class who rarely play with me because they must sweep the house and clean dirty dishes at home. As girls, it is expected of them.”

Lili*, 11, from China, said:

Play makes me have more time to stay with my friends and our relationship will be deeper and deeper. And I also can learn from my friends during play.”

The ‘Girls Unstoppable’ programme will work with schools and girls clubs, creating new girls clubs where they don’t exist.

Mai*, 11, Vietnam, is a proactive leader in her child led group, she said:

“I used to have stage fright when speaking in front of many people but now I no longer shy away from it. I can freely express myself and whenever I do that, I feel like I am shining.”

Girls will have the opportunity to decide on topics for workshops and trainings, such as knowing your rights, staying safe, making informed decisions, and campaign planning.

Activities will be adapted to the local context. Mexico campaign strategies are being developed to support girls that belong to indigenous communities and other vulnerable groups. Children across all four countries will be encouraged to write a journal, where they can document their thoughts and feelings to support their mental wellbeing.

In addition to empowering girls, the programme also breaks down gender barriers and addresses cultural norms, which prevent girls from reaching their full potential.

Olivia*, 11, from Puebla, Mexico, thinks that teachers don’t listen to what girls have to say. She said:

“Above all, many more stereotypes have been imposed on females than on men and much harsher, so women are always oppressed, guarded, taking care of the children and not going out or leading.”

The activities in the four countries will also be used to raise global awareness about the barriers that girls face in accessing their rights and how to overcome them, so girls’ and women’s rights are respected at all levels in societies.

Johanne Schmidt­-Nielsen, CEO at Save the Children Denmark, said:

“We believe in the power of play to unlock a child’s potential. Through Girls Unstoppable, we aim to inspire and support girls in developing critical skills that will contribute to their personal and societal development.

“Girls Unstoppable will not only empower girls but also break down gender barriers and cultural norms inhibiting their growth individually and as a group. Save the Children is proud to partner with the LEGO Group and the LEGO Foundation in this transformative programme.”

In addition to the 10,000 girls reached directly, the programme will directly support around 5,000 boys, around 2,000 teachers, and around 1,000 community members through initiatives such as workshops and trainings, to create long-lasting change. ‘Girls Unstoppable’ will indirectly reach over 330,000 girls, boys, caregivers, teachers and community members through advocacy and awareness campaigns. Around 2.2 million people will be reached via online activities, such as social media campaigns.  

ENDS

*Name changed to protect anonymity

About the partnership

The LEGO Group and LEGO Foundation are crucial partners to achieve Save the Children’s ambition – that all children survive are protected and learn. In the past decade, we have been collaboratively implementing more than 45 impactful programmes helping hundreds of thousands of children in 29 countries across the globe. Together we are committed to helping children thrive and reach their full potential through quality learning and wellbeing interventions incorporating play, playful approaches, and holistic development.

With learning through play at its core, the programmes born from this collaboration strengthened children’s holistic development by working in hundreds of pre-schools, schools, and child friendly spaces; supporting emergency responses to conflict, the COVID-19 pandemic and natural disasters; and advocated with governments, education institutions and caregivers on the transformative power of playful learning and play-based psychological support.

About the LEGO Group

The LEGO Group’s mission is to inspire and develop the builders of tomorrow through the power of play. The LEGO System in Play, with its foundation in LEGO bricks, allows children and fans to build and rebuild anything they can imagine.

The LEGO Group was founded in Billund, Denmark in 1932 by Ole Kirk Kristiansen, its name derived from the two Danish words LEg GOdt, which mean “Play Well”. Today, the LEGO Group remains a family-owned company headquartered in Billund. However, its products are now sold in more than 130 countries worldwide. For more information: www.LEGO.com

About the LEGO Foundation

The LEGO Foundation aims to inspire and develop the builders of tomorrow; a mission that it shares with the LEGO Group. The LEGO Foundation is dedicated to building a future where learning through play empowers children to become creative, engaged, lifelong learners. Its work is about re-defining play and re-imagining learning. In collaboration with thought leaders, influencers, educators and parents the LEGO Foundation aims to equip, inspire and activate champions for play. www.learningthroughplay.com

For media interviews please contact:

Jonas Fruensgaard, Communications Officer (Denmark) jofn@redbarnet.dk

Ruby Wright, Global Media Manager (UK) ruby.wright@savethechildren.org

For out of hours (GMT) media enquiries please contact media@savethechildren.org.uk / +44(0)7831 650409