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	<title>Inter Press Servicebarrel bombs Topics</title>
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		<title>Syrians: ‘Biggest Refugee Population From a Single Conflict in a Generation’</title>
		<link>https://www.ipsnews.net/2015/07/beleaguered-syrians-comprise-worlds-biggest-refugee-population-from-a-single-conflict-in-a-generation/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 09 Jul 2015 20:51:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Kanya DAlmeida</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Barely 10 months ago, the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) said the refugee population from Syria had reached the three million mark. Today, the latest data from the field show that the number has passed four million. “This is the biggest refugee population from a single conflict in a generation,” U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees [&#8230;]]]></description>
		
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font color="#999999"><img width="300" height="189" src="https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2015/07/8211986588_54c6f4f542_z-300x189.jpg" class="attachment-medium size-medium wp-post-image" alt="" decoding="async" fetchpriority="high" srcset="https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2015/07/8211986588_54c6f4f542_z-300x189.jpg 300w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2015/07/8211986588_54c6f4f542_z-629x397.jpg 629w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2015/07/8211986588_54c6f4f542_z.jpg 640w" sizes="(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">A child stands amid the rubble of what was once his home, after an aerial bombardment on the city of Idlib in northwestern Syria. Credit: Freedom House/CC-BY-2.0</p></font></p><p>By Kanya D'Almeida<br />UNITED NATIONS, Jul 9 2015 (IPS) </p><p>Barely 10 months ago, the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) said the refugee population from Syria had reached the three million mark. Today, the latest data from the field show that the number has passed four million.</p>
<p><span id="more-141510"></span>“This is the biggest refugee population from a single conflict in a generation,” U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres said in a statement on Jul. 9.</p>
<p>"I took [my son] to the field hospital in Tafas. They tried to help him but couldn't, since the appropriate equipment is not available in Syria. He needed to go to Jordan for treatment." -- Murad, the father of a 27-day-old baby injured in a barrel bomb attack in Syria<br /><font size="1"></font>“It is a population that deserves the support of the world but is instead living in dire conditions and sinking deeper into abject poverty.”</p>
<p>Midway through its fifth year, the Syrian conflict that began in March 2011 has reached catastrophic heights, and yet shows no sign of abating.</p>
<p>What started out as mass demonstrations against long-time ruler Bashar al-Assad now involves multiple armed groups including fighters from the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS).</p>
<p>A quarter of a million people are dead, according to estimates by the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. A further 840,000 are injured, with many thousands maimed for life.</p>
<p>And as U.N. agencies struggle to cobble together the funds needed to heal, house and feed millions who have fled bullet-ridden towns and demolished cities, the exodus just keeps growing.</p>
<p>A UNHCR <a href="http://www.unhcr.org/559d648a9.html">press release</a> issued Thursday said Turkey is hosting 1.8 million Syrians, more than any other nation in the region. Over 250,000 of these refugees are living in 23 camps established and maintained by the Turkish government.</p>
<p>Other countries in the region that have opened their doors to scores of families fleeing the fighting include Lebanon (currently home to over 1.7 million Syrians), Jordan (hosting 629,000 refugees), Iraq (249,000) and Egypt (132,000).</p>
<p>In every single one of these countries, health and infrastructure facilities are quickly nearing breaking point as the hungry, sick and wounded arrive in droves.</p>
<p>On Jul. 9 Doctors Without Borders (MSF) <a href="http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/article/jordan-increasing-numbers-wounded-syrians-fleeing-barrel-bombs">warned</a> that Jordanian hospitals are groaning under a huge patient burden, including numerous Syrians injured by barrel bombs.</p>
<p>In the last two weeks alone more than 65 war-wounded patients turned up at the emergency room of Al-Ramtha hospital in northern Jordan – less than three miles from the Syrian border &#8211; where MSF teams have been working with the Jordanian Ministry of Health to provide emergency care to refugees.</p>
<p>The medical humanitarian organisation has called repeatedly for an end to the use of these <a href="https://www.ipsnews.net/2015/02/syrias-barrel-bombs-cause-human-devastation-says-rights-group/">deadly, improvised weapons</a>, which are typically constructed from oil drums, gas cylinders or water tanks filled with explosives and locally-sourced scrap metals dropped from high-altitude helicopters.</p>
<p>Due to the wide impact radius of barrel bomb attacks, victim often suffer wounds that are impossible to treat within Syria’s borders, where many health facilities have been reduced to rubble in the past five years.</p>
<p>&#8220;More than 70 percent of the wounded we receive suffer from blast injuries, and their multiple wounds tell their stories,&#8221; Renate Sinke, project coordinator of MSF’s emergency surgical programme in Ramtha, said in the statement released Thursday.</p>
<p>Dr. Muhammad Shoaib, MSF’s medical coordinator in Jordan, added, &#8220;A significant proportion of the patients we receive have suffered head injuries and other multiple injuries that cannot be treated inside southern Syria, as CT-scans and other treatment options are limited.”</p>
<p>One of the patients at Al-Ramtha Hospital, the father of a 27-day-old child who suffered head injuries as a result of shrapnel from a barrel bomb, recounted his family’s plight, which mirrors the experience of millions of civilians caught in the crossfire of the deadly conflict.</p>
<p>&#8220;At 9:00 a.m., a barrel bomb hit our house in Tafas […]. When I heard the news, I dropped what I was doing and I ran to the house as fast as I could […]. I saw my little boy. He was quiet and his head seemed to be injured. I took him to the field hospital in Tafas. They tried to help him but couldn&#8217;t, since the appropriate equipment is not available in Syria. He needed to go to Jordan for treatment,” Murad, the boy’s father, told MSF staff.</p>
<p>“It took us one-and-a-half hours from the time of injury until we arrived at the border, and some more before arriving in Ramtha. Now, all I want is for my baby to be better and go back to Syria.&#8221;</p>
<p>It is families like these that comprise the bulk of Syrian refugees, the highest recorded since 1992 when Afghan refugees reached an estimated 4.6 million, says the U.N. Refugee Agency.</p>
<p>Indeed, the figure from Syria could well be even higher than field reports suggest, and does not include the roughly 270,000 asylum applications by Syrians in Europe. A further 7.2 million people are displaced inside Syria itself, in remote or heavily embattled regions.</p>
<p>Worse, officials say, is the apparently inverse relationship between emergency needs and humanitarian funding: with the former constantly rising, while the latter shrinks.</p>
<p>UNHCR and its partners had requested 5.5 billion dollars for relief operations in 2015, but so far only a quarter of those funds have been received.</p>
<p>The World Food Programme (WFP), tasked with feeding about six million Syrians inside the country and in the surrounding region, is facing a massive shortfall, and warned last week that unless immediate funding became available, <a href="https://www.ipsnews.net/2015/07/syrian-refugees-face-hunger-amidst-humanitarian-funding-crisis/">half a million people could starve</a>.</p>
<p>There is also the very real possibility that over 1.7 million people will have to face the coming winter months without fuel or shelter.</p>
<p>As aid supplies dwindle, desperate and impoverished families are sending their children out to earn a living – according to a <a href="https://www.ipsnews.net/2015/07/child-labour-a-hidden-atrocity-of-the-syrian-crisis/">joint report</a> released this week by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and Save the Children, three quarters of all refugee households surveyed reported that children have become breadwinners.</p>
<p>Against the backdrop of soaring poverty rates, these findings are perhaps not unexpected. An estimated 86 percent of refugees outside of camps in Jordan, for instance, live below the poverty line, while a further 55 percent of refugees in Lebanon are living in “sub-standard” shelters, according to the refugee agency.</p>
<p>While world leaders oscillate between political and military solutions to the crisis, Syrians are faced with a choice: death by shrapnel at home or death by starvation abroad?</p>
<p><em>Edited by Kitty Stapp</em></p>
<div id='related_articles'>
 <h1 class="section">Related Articles</h1>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://www.ipsnews.net/2015/07/child-labour-a-hidden-atrocity-of-the-syrian-crisis/" >Child Labour: A Hidden Atrocity of the Syrian Crisis</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.ipsnews.net/2015/07/syrian-refugees-face-hunger-amidst-humanitarian-funding-crisis/" >Syrian Refugees Face Hunger Amidst Humanitarian Funding Crisis</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.ipsnews.net/2015/02/syrias-barrel-bombs-cause-human-devastation-says-rights-group/" >Syria’s “Barrel Bombs” Cause Human Devastation, Says Rights Group</a></li>
</ul></div>		]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>At Least 18 Already Killed in Yarmouk Attacks: Amnesty International</title>
		<link>https://www.ipsnews.net/2015/04/at-least-18-already-killed-in-yarmouk-attacks-amnesty-international/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 09 Apr 2015 03:16:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Josh Butler</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ipsnews.net/?p=140092</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[At least 18 civilians have already been killed in the attack on the Syrian refugee camp of Yarmouk, according to Amnesty International. The Palestinian refugee camp, on the outskirts of Damascus, was besieged by members of the so-called Islamic State (IS) and al-Qaeda affiliate al-Nusra last week. By Apr. 4, the Syrian Observatory for Human [&#8230;]]]></description>
		
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By Josh Butler<br />UNITED NATIONS, Apr 9 2015 (IPS) </p><p>At least 18 civilians have already been killed in the attack on the Syrian refugee camp of Yarmouk, according to Amnesty International.</p>
<p><span id="more-140092"></span>The Palestinian refugee camp, on the outskirts of Damascus, was besieged by members of the so-called Islamic State (IS) and al-Qaeda affiliate al-Nusra last week. By Apr. 4, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported that 90 percent of the camp was controlled by militants.</p>
<p>Amnesty reported Wednesday that those living in the camp have come under sniper fire and clashes between armed groups, as well as shelling and <a href="https://www.ipsnews.net/2015/02/syrias-barrel-bombs-cause-human-devastation-says-rights-group/" target="_blank">barrel bombing</a> by Syrian government forces. Fighting in the camp, which houses around 18,000 refugees, has largely been between IS and members of Palestinian militia group Aknaf Beit al-Maqdis.</p>
<p>Residents told Amnesty 25 barrel bombs have been dropped on the camp, mostly during night hours.</p>
<p>Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, Amnesty International&#8217;s deputy Middle East and North Africa director, accused the Syrian government of committing a “war crime” in dropping barrel bombs on the camp.</p>
<p>“The use of barrel bombs against a besieged and starving civilian population is yet another demonstration of the Syrian government flouting international humanitarian law and its callousness towards civilians,” he said in a <a href="https://www.amnesty.org/articles/news/2015/04/syria-barrel-bombs-and-sniper-attacks-compound-misery-of-civilians-besieged-in-yarmouk/">statement</a> on Amnesty International’s website.</p>
<p>“Shelling and dropping barrel bombs on a populated civilian area is a war crime. All such attacks must end immediately.”</p>
<p>Amnesty reported a 12-year-old girl killed by a sniper, and a humanitarian worker shot in crossfire, were among at least 18 killed in Yarmouk in the last week, and warned many more deaths were on the way if fighting continued.</p>
<p>“Thousands more are at risk as Syrian government forces have intensified the shelling and aerial bombardment of the camp in response to the IS takeover of the area, including by dropping barrel bombs,” Amnesty said in a statement on its <a href="https://www.amnesty.org/articles/news/2015/04/syria-barrel-bombs-and-sniper-attacks-compound-misery-of-civilians-besieged-in-yarmouk/">website</a>.</p>
<p>Fighting may soon intensify, with reports the Syrian government has offered to arm Palestinian forces fighting IS militia. Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) Official Anwar Abdul Hadi said Tuesday that &#8220;Syrian authorities are ready to support the Palestinian fighters in a number of ways, including militarily, to push IS out of the camp.&#8221;</p>
<p>Amnesty claimed no relief organisations remained in the camp, and that Syria government and IS forces have blocked medical and humanitarian assistance. One of Yarmouk’s two medical facilities was hit by a missile on the first day of the siege.</p>
<p>The <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Relief_and_Works_Agency_for_Palestine_Refugees_in_the_Near_East">United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East</a> (UNRWA) wrote on social media Wednesday that food packages distributed to refugees in the camp have run out. On <a href="https://twitter.com/unrwa">Twitter</a>, UNRWA said it was assisting 94 civilians who had managed to escape Yarmouk overnight and take refuge in a school.</p>
<p>Amnesty&#8217;s Sahraoui said civilians faced “an agonising struggle for survival.”</p>
<p>“After enduring a crippling two-year-long government-imposed siege, now they are pinned down by sniper fire fearing for their lives as shelling and aerial attacks escalate,” he said.</p>
<p>“Immediate and unfettered access to Yarmouk by independent humanitarian agencies is desperately needed to alleviate this relentless suffering.”</p>
<p><em>Edited by Kanya D&#8217;Almeida</em></p>
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		<title>Syria&#8217;s &#8220;Barrel Bombs&#8221; Cause Human Devastation, Says Rights Group</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 24 Feb 2015 22:18:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Thalif Deen</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[The warring parties in the brutal four-year-old military conflict in Syria, which has claimed the lives of over 200,000 civilians and triggered “the greatest refugee crisis in modern times,” continue to break every single pledge held out to the United Nations. Despite Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s plea for a political rather than military solution to the country’s ongoing [&#8230;]]]></description>
		
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font color="#999999"><img width="300" height="180" src="https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2015/02/syria-bombing-300x180.jpg" class="attachment-medium size-medium wp-post-image" alt="" decoding="async" loading="lazy" srcset="https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2015/02/syria-bombing-300x180.jpg 300w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2015/02/syria-bombing-629x378.jpg 629w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2015/02/syria-bombing.jpg 638w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">A girl cries near a damaged car at a site hit by what activists said were barrel bombs dropped by government forces in Aleppo's Dahret Awwad neighbourhood Jan. 29, 2014. Credit: Freedom House/cc by 2.0</p></font></p><p>By Thalif Deen<br />UNITED NATIONS, Feb 24 2015 (IPS) </p><p>The warring parties in the brutal four-year-old military conflict in Syria, which has claimed the lives of over 200,000 civilians and triggered “the greatest refugee crisis in modern times,” continue to break every single pledge held out to the United Nations.<span id="more-139328"></span></p>
<p>Despite Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s plea for a political rather than military solution to the country’s ongoing civil war, both the Syrian government and the multiple rebel forces continue to escalate the conflict with aerial attacks and artillery shelling, hindering the delivery of humanitarian aid.“Amid talk of a possible temporary cessation of strikes on Aleppo, the question is whether Russia and China will finally allow the U.N. Security Council to impose sanctions to stop barrel bombs.” -- Nadim Houry <br /><font size="1"></font></p>
<p>But the worst of it, says Human Rights Watch (HRW) in <a href="http://www.hrw.org/news/2015/02/24/syria-new-spate-barrel-bomb-attacks">report released Tuesday</a>, is the use of locally improvised deadly “barrel bombs.”</p>
<p>By examining satellite imagery, HRW said, it has identified at least 450 distinct major damage sites in 10 towns and villages held by rebel groups in Daraa and over 1,000 in Aleppo between February last year and January this year.</p>
<p>“These impact sites have damage signatures strongly consistent with the detonation of large, air-dropped munitions, including improvised barrel and conventional bombs dropped by helicopters. Damages that possibly result from the use of rockets, missiles, or fuel-air bombs are also likely in a number of instances,” the group said.</p>
<p>According to HRW, barrel bombs are unguided high explosive weapons that are cheaply made, locally produced, and typically constructed from large oil drums, gas cylinders, and water tanks, filled with high explosives and scrap metal to enhance fragmentation, and then dropped from helicopters usually flying at high altitude.</p>
<p>Asked if the explosives in the barrel bombs originate either from Russia or China, two strong political and military allies of the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, the United Nations Director of HRW Philippe Bolopion told IPS: “We are not in a position to say where the high explosive is coming from but barrel bombs are pretty primitive and made from commonly found materials.”</p>
<p>With the 15-member Security Council deadlocked over Syria, there is little or no hope that Russia and China, two members with veto powers, will ever relent or penalise the Assad regime despite several resolutions.</p>
<p>“We certainly hope they will stand by their own resolution and impose consequences on the regime for thumbing its nose at the Security Council,” Bolopion said.</p>
<p>Asked if protests by HRW and other human rights organisations will be an exercise in futility, he said: “Sadly, when thousands of civilians are being slaughtered, we have to continue to place the Security Council, and Russia and China in particular, in front of their responsibilities, no matter how futile it may sound.”</p>
<p>Nadim Houry, HRW’s deputy Middle East and North Africa director, said: “For a year, the Security Council has done nothing to stop Bashar al-Assad’s murderous air bombing campaign on rebel-held areas, which has terrorized, killed, and displaced civilians.</p>
<p>“Amid talk of a possible temporary cessation of strikes on Aleppo, the question is whether Russia and China will finally allow the U.N. Security Council to impose sanctions to stop barrel bombs,” Houry said.</p>
<p>The Security Council is expected to meet Thursday for its next round of reporting on resolution 2139 of Feb. 22, 2014, which demanded that all parties to the conflict in Syria end the indiscriminate use of barrel bombs and other weapons in populated areas.</p>
<p>In a statement released Tuesday, HRW said non-state armed groups have also conducted indiscriminate attacks, including with car bombs and explosive weapons in government held areas.</p>
<p>The Security Council should impose an arms embargo on the government as well as rebel groups implicated in widespread or systematic indiscriminate attacks, HRW said.</p>
<p>The government attacks have led to the death and injury of thousands of civilians in rebel-held territory, according to HRW researchers.</p>
<p>The Violations Documentation Center (VDC), a local monitoring group, has documented 609 civilian deaths, including 203 children and 117 women, in Daraa from aerial attacks between Feb. 22, 2014, and Feb. 19, 2015.</p>
<p>During the same period they have documented 2,576 civilian deaths in Aleppo governorate from aerial attacks, including 636 children and 317 women.</p>
<p>While deaths from aerial attacks are not exclusively from barrel bombs, residents from rebel-held territory in Daraa and Aleppo told HRW that barrel bombs account for a majority of air strikes.</p>
<p>Last week, Ban appealed to all parties to de-escalate the conflict in order to provide a reprieve for the long-suffering civilians of Syria. An immediate de-escalation is a much needed step towards a political solution to the conflict, he added</p>
<p>U.N. Special Envoy Staffan de Mistura told the Security Council last week that the Syrian government has committed to suspend all aerial attacks and artillery shelling over the entire city of Aleppo for a period of six weeks.</p>
<p>This is in order to allow the United Nations to implement a pilot project of unhindered delivery of humanitarian aid starting with one district in Aleppo and building incrementally to others.</p>
<p>Ban said Security Council resolution 2139 called for an end to the indiscriminate employment of weapons in populated areas in Syria, including shelling and aerial bombardment, and expects the Syrian government to follow through on its commitment.</p>
<p>The secretary-general also appealed to all armed opposition groups in Aleppo to suspend their shelling of the city.</p>
<p>He pointed out that the last four years of war have led to the deaths of over 200,000 civilians, the greatest refugee crisis of modern times and created an environment in which extremist groups and terrorist organisations such as ISIL/Daesh flourish.</p>
<p>The secretary-general recalled Security Council resolutions 2170 and 2178 and stressed that there is no military solution to this conflict.</p>
<p>“This is a political conflict. Ending the killing, reversing the increasing fragmentation of Syria requires a political process, based on the full implementation of the Geneva Communique of 2012, that addresses the deep roots of the conflict and meets the aspirations of all Syrians,” he added.</p>
<p><em>Edited by Kitty Stapp</em></p>
<p><em>The writer can be contacted at thalifdeen@aol.com</em></p>
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<li><a href="http://www.ipsnews.net/2014/05/u-n-probe-chief-doubtful-syria-sarin-exposure-claims/" >U.N. Probe Chief Doubtful on Syria Sarin Exposure Claims</a></li>
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		<title>Children in Aleppo Forced Underground to Go to School</title>
		<link>https://www.ipsnews.net/2014/11/children-in-aleppo-forced-underground-to-go-to-school/</link>
		<comments>https://www.ipsnews.net/2014/11/children-in-aleppo-forced-underground-to-go-to-school/#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 06 Nov 2014 11:05:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Shelly Kittleson</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ipsnews.net/?p=137618</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Winter has not yet hit this nearly besieged city, but children are already attending classes in winter coats and stocking hats. Cold, damp underground education facilities are less exposed to regime barrel bombs and airstrikes but necessitate greater bundling to prevent common seasonal viruses from taking hold in a city from which most doctors have [&#8230;]]]></description>
		
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font color="#999999"><img width="300" height="215" src="https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/11/Underground-school-in-Aleppo.1.-October-2014.-Photo-by-Shelly-Kittleson-300x215.jpg" class="attachment-medium size-medium wp-post-image" alt="" decoding="async" loading="lazy" srcset="https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/11/Underground-school-in-Aleppo.1.-October-2014.-Photo-by-Shelly-Kittleson-300x215.jpg 300w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/11/Underground-school-in-Aleppo.1.-October-2014.-Photo-by-Shelly-Kittleson-1024x735.jpg 1024w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/11/Underground-school-in-Aleppo.1.-October-2014.-Photo-by-Shelly-Kittleson-629x451.jpg 629w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/11/Underground-school-in-Aleppo.1.-October-2014.-Photo-by-Shelly-Kittleson-900x646.jpg 900w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Children in Aleppo forced underground to go to school, October 2014. Credit: Shelly Kittleson/IPS</p></font></p><p>By Shelly Kittleson<br />ALEPPO, Nov 6 2014 (IPS) </p><p>Winter has not yet hit this nearly besieged city, but children are already attending classes in winter coats and stocking hats.<span id="more-137618"></span></p>
<p>Cold, damp underground education facilities are less exposed to regime barrel bombs and airstrikes but necessitate greater bundling to prevent common seasonal viruses from taking hold in a city from which most doctors have fled or been killed.</p>
<p>Only one perilous route leads out of the city and northwards to the Turkish border and better medical care, if required.A few of the children in the co-ed primary school seem shell-shocked, but many smile and laugh readily on the crowded wooden benches stuffed into the cramped, cold spaces.<br /><font size="1"></font></p>
<p>On the way to an underground school IPS visited in late October, the children must necessarily pass by shop fronts blown out by airstrikes, a few remaining signs advertising what used to be clothing, hairdressers’ or wedding apparel shops with the ‘idolatrous’ images spray-painted black by the Islamic State (IS) when they briefly controlled the area, before being pushed out by rebel groups.</p>
<p>The jihadist group is still battling to retake terrain in the area, with the closest frontline against them being in Marea, an estimated 30 kilometres away from opposition-held areas of eastern Aleppo.</p>
<p>They must also witness the destruction wrought by the regime, which is trying to impose a total siege on opposition areas and which would need to take only a few kilometres more of terrain to do so.</p>
<p>Even if they only live a block away, the children are forced to walk by buildings entirely defaced by barrel bombs, floors hanging down precariously above the heads of fruit, vegetable and sweets street vendors. A pink toilet and part of a couch are still visibly wedged between the upper, mutilated and dangling levels of one such building on their way.</p>
<p>A few of the children in the co-ed primary school seem shell-shocked, but many smile and laugh readily on the crowded wooden benches stuffed into the cramped, cold spaces. Two boys at the front of one of the rooms sway back and forth with their arms around each other’s shoulders, singing boisterously.</p>
<p>Some of the rough walls have been painted sky blue or festooned with holiday-type decorations to ‘’brighten the children’s spirits’’, one of teachers says. A few comic-strip posters have been pasted in the corridor.</p>
<div id="attachment_137619" style="width: 310px" class="wp-caption alignleft"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-137619" class="wp-image-137619 size-medium" src="https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/11/Children-singing-in-underground-school-in-Aleppo.-October-2014.-photo-by-Shelly-Kittleson-300x215.jpg" alt="Children signing in underground school in Aleppo, October 2014. Credit: Shelly Kittleson/IPS" width="300" height="215" srcset="https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/11/Children-singing-in-underground-school-in-Aleppo.-October-2014.-photo-by-Shelly-Kittleson-300x215.jpg 300w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/11/Children-singing-in-underground-school-in-Aleppo.-October-2014.-photo-by-Shelly-Kittleson-1024x734.jpg 1024w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/11/Children-singing-in-underground-school-in-Aleppo.-October-2014.-photo-by-Shelly-Kittleson-629x450.jpg 629w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/11/Children-singing-in-underground-school-in-Aleppo.-October-2014.-photo-by-Shelly-Kittleson-900x645.jpg 900w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" /><p id="caption-attachment-137619" class="wp-caption-text">Children singing in underground school in Aleppo, October 2014. Credit: Shelly Kittleson/IPS</p></div>
<p>The classes run from 9 in the morning to 1 in the afternoon during the week, one of the instructors – Zakra, a former fifth-year university student in engineering – told IPS.</p>
<p>Zakra, who now teaches mathematics, English and science at the school, said that she gets paid about 50 dollars a month. All of the school’s 15 teachers are women wearing all-covering black garments. Some cover their faces as well, some do not. IPS was told not to photograph them in any case, because many still have family members in regime areas.</p>
<p>‘’The school opened last year,’’ Zakra said, ‘’but then stopped between October 2013 and July 2014, as the barrel-bombing campaign made it too dangerous for parents to send their children to school,’’ even to underground ones.</p>
<p>The young teacher said that she plans on leaving at some point to continue her studies in Turkey but was not sure when, primarily due to economic reasons.</p>
<p>Older students are mostly left to their own devices, because this school and others like it only provide for those ages 6 to 13.</p>
<p>The head of the education department of the Aleppo City Council – who goes by the name of Mahmoud Al-Qudsi &#8211; told IPS that some 115 schools were still operating in the area, but that most of them were former ground-level flats, basements or other structures.</p>
<p>Only about 20 original school buildings were still operating, he said, from some 750 in the area prior to the uprising.</p>
<p>Syrian government forces have targeted educational and medical facilities in opposition areas throughout the conflict, and efforts are made to keep the locations secret.</p>
<p>Those preparing for the baccalaureate – the Syrian secondary school diploma – study at home, he said. They then come to centres on established dates to actually take the exams in late June and early July. Word is spread of where they will be held via the Aleppo Today television channel, which broadcasts out of Gaziantep, and posters are put up around the city to announce the times and places.</p>
<p>Turkey, Libya and France currently recognise the baccalaureate exams, Qudsi noted, but ‘’French universities only accepted five of our students last year.’’</p>
<p>Most of the curriculum remains that approved by the regime, but ‘nationalistic’ parts praising the Assad family have been cut and religion classes now teach that ‘’fighting against the Assad regime is a religious duty.’’</p>
<p>‘’We also want to change the curricula, but we can’t right now. We want it to be a Syrian-chosen one – one designed and wanted by all Syrians – but we can’t do that now, given the situation,’’ said Qudsi, ‘’and we obviously don’t have the money to print new books.’’</p>
<p>Most of the low salaries the teachers receive are necessarily funded by various international and private associations because the city council just does not have the funds, he noted.</p>
<p>The council, ‘’was only able to pay the equivalent of 70 dollars each for the entire academic year but the teachers were happy about it nonetheless, since it shows that we appreciate what they are doing.’’</p>
<p>Qudsi was also adamant that even the most fundamentalist parents had not interfered with their teaching.  ‘’We are all in this together. Their children attend our schools, too.’’</p>
<p>The barrel bombs stopped entirely for a number of days earlier this autumn after rebel forces closed in on the Aleppo air defence factories where the crude bombs made of scrap metal and explosives are assembled by regime forces. The bombing has since resumed following regime gains.</p>
<p>On arriving at the scene of one such attack in late October, IPS saw a body pulled from the rubble by the civil defence forces before they rushed with flashlights around the block to get to the other side of the collapsed building, where three young children had been trapped underneath the rubble. All were later found dead.</p>
<p>Families were crowded on the steps outside of other buildings down the street, and flashlight beams illuminated the faces of clutches of frightened children, an adult or two nearby in the dust raised by the concrete slabs brought down in the impact.</p>
<p>The schools at least give the children a chance to focus on something other than the destruction and death surrounding them, Qudsi told IPS, and ‘’are the only chance of Syria having any future at all.’</p>
<p>(Edited by <a href="http://www.ips.org/institutional/our-global-structure/biographies/phil-harris/">Phil Harris</a>)</p>
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		<title>TNT and Scrap Metal Eviscerate Syria’s Industrial Capital</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 19 Aug 2014 17:53:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Shelly Kittleson</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ipsnews.net/?p=136210</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Numerous mechanics, tyre and car body shops used to line the busy streets near the Old City of Syria’s previous industrial and commercial hub. Now car parts, scrap metal, TNT and other explosive materials are packed into oil drums, water tanks or other large cylinders from regime areas and dropped from helicopters onto civilian areas [&#8230;]]]></description>
		
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font color="#999999"><img width="300" height="219" src="https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/08/Aleppo-civil-defence-team-searches-for-survivors-after-barrel-bomb-attack.-August-2014.-photo-by-Shelly-Kittleson-300x219.jpg" class="attachment-medium size-medium wp-post-image" alt="" decoding="async" loading="lazy" srcset="https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/08/Aleppo-civil-defence-team-searches-for-survivors-after-barrel-bomb-attack.-August-2014.-photo-by-Shelly-Kittleson-300x219.jpg 300w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/08/Aleppo-civil-defence-team-searches-for-survivors-after-barrel-bomb-attack.-August-2014.-photo-by-Shelly-Kittleson-1024x749.jpg 1024w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/08/Aleppo-civil-defence-team-searches-for-survivors-after-barrel-bomb-attack.-August-2014.-photo-by-Shelly-Kittleson-629x460.jpg 629w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/08/Aleppo-civil-defence-team-searches-for-survivors-after-barrel-bomb-attack.-August-2014.-photo-by-Shelly-Kittleson-900x658.jpg 900w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Member of Aleppo civil defence team searches for survivors after barrel bomb attack, August 2014. Credit: Shelly Kittleson/IPS</p></font></p><p>By Shelly Kittleson<br />ALEPPO, Syria / GAZIANTEP, Turkey, Aug 19 2014 (IPS) </p><p>Numerous mechanics, tyre and car body shops used to line the busy streets near the Old City of Syria’s previous industrial and commercial hub.<span id="more-136210"></span></p>
<p>Now car parts, scrap metal, TNT and other explosive materials are packed into oil drums, water tanks or other large cylinders from regime areas and dropped from helicopters onto civilian areas in the same city, in defiance of <a href="http://blog.unwatch.org/index.php/2014/02/22/full-text-un-security-council-resolution-2139/">U.N. Security Council Resolution 2139</a>.</p>
<p>In the days spent inside the city in August, IPS frequently heard bombs throughout the day and night and visited several sites of recent attacks on civilian areas. Locally organised <a href="https://www.ipsnews.net/2014/08/trauma-kits-and-body-bags-now-fill-aleppo-school/">civil defence units</a> could be seen trying to extract survivors from the rubble, but often nothing could be done.</p>
<p>Roughly six months ago, on February 22, the U.N. resolution ordered all parties to the conflict to halt the indiscriminate use of barrel bombs on populated areas. The Syrian regime has instead intensified its use of them.An Aleppo local council official told IPS that of the some 1.5 million people living in the city previously, there were now fewer than 400,000, with most of those who have left in recent months now internally displaced.<br /><font size="1"></font></p>
<p>Human Rights Watch released a<a href="http://www.hrw.org/news/2014/07/30/syria-barrage-barrel-bombs"> report</a> in late July saying that it had identified ‘’at least 380 distinct damage site in areas held by non-state armed groups in Aleppo’’ through satellite imaging in the period from October 31, 2013 to the February 22 resolution, and over 650 new impact strikes on rebel-held areas in the period since, marking a significant increase.</p>
<p>One of the deadliest days of recent months in the city was on June 16, when 68 civilians were killed by aerial attacks, according to the <a href="http://www.vdc-sy.info/index.php/en/">Violations Documentation Center</a> in Syria. The centre also noted that in the five months between February 22 and July 22, a total of 1,655 civilians were killed in the Aleppo governorate by aerial attacks.</p>
<p>An Aleppo local council official told IPS that of the some 1.5 million people living in the city previously, there were now fewer than 400,000, with most of those who have left in recent months now internally displaced. He said that every month the number of people in the area is re-counted for food supply and other requests to donors given the huge displacement under way.</p>
<p>The only road heading towards the Turkish border in rebel hands is now in danger of falling to the fundamentalist Islamic State (IS) – previously known as Islamist State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) – even if the armed opposition groups manage to keep government troops at bay.</p>
<p>Regime forces are trying to inflict a siege on Aleppo’s rebel-held areas to force them into submission, as they have done to other cities in <a href="http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/MDE24/008/2014/en">several parts</a> of the country.</p>
<p>The removal of the jihadist IS group from large sections of territory not under regime control has been entirely due to the fighting by the rebel groups themselves, and it is likely that many will face brutal execution if the group enters the city again – a prospect the regime seems to be favouring.</p>
<p>Barrel bombs are not dropped on IS forces or on the territory held by them, and until recently there were few cases of any sort of attack at all by regime forces against IS-held areas.</p>
<p>A local activist from IS-controlled Jarabulus, now living across the border in Turkey – after coming under suspicion of “speaking negatively of IS” within the community – told IPS that since the jihadist group had taken control of the city, ‘’there has not been a single attack on any part of it’’ by the regime.</p>
<p>The TNT-filled cylinders dropped by Syrian government forces have in recent months instead been destroying the few productive activities that had remained in a city formerly known worldwide for its olive oil soap, textiles and other industries.</p>
<p>Aya Jamili, a local activist now living in Turkey, told IPS that the few Aleppo businessmen who had tried to keep their operations up and running through the years of the conflict had in recent months either moved their equipment across the border or just moved whatever capital they had available and started over again.</p>
<p>Much activity needed for day-to-day survival in the city has moved underground. Underground structures have been renovated by civil defence units into shelters, which also served to hold the festivities marking the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan in late July. Any large gathering in the streets would have been likely to attract the attention of the regime.</p>
<p>People who can have moved to basement flats, as have media centres and bakeries, which work at night to avoid being targeted.</p>
<p>Produce is brought in from the countryside and stands sell melons and tomatoes in the streets nearer the regime ones. Because barrel bombs cannot be precisely aimed, there is too large a risk for the regime of dropping them close to its own side, so these locations are deemed ‘safer’.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, there is still the constant risk of snipers and large sheets of bullet-scarred canvas have been hung across some of the streets to minimise their line of vision.</p>
<p>The once bustling, traffic-clogged streets farther away resemble for the most part desolate wastelands.</p>
<p>On the way out of the city, two barrel bombs were dropped in quick succession near the neighbourhood through which IPS was travelling and, just as the driver said ‘’the helicopters only carry two each, so for the moment that’s all’’ and sped onwards, a third, deafening impact occurred nearby, shaking the ground.</p>
<p>Further down the road, signs indicating the way to ‘Sheikh Najjar, industrial city’ are shot through with bullet holes, an apocalyptic scene of crumbling buildings behind them.</p>
<p>(Edited by <a href="http://www.ips.org/institutional/our-global-structure/biographies/phil-harris/">Phil Harris</a>)</p>
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		<title>Trauma Kits and Body Bags Now Fill Aleppo School</title>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 16 Aug 2014 17:44:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Shelly Kittleson</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Volunteer civil defence units operating here in Syria’s largest city careen through crater-pocked routes of precariously hanging, pancaked concrete where barrel bombs have struck. Greyish dust blankets the dead, the alive and the twisted steel jutting out.  The panicked confusion immortalised in innumerable photos – with bloodied survivors raking desperately through the rubble for loved [&#8230;]]]></description>
		
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font color="#999999"><img width="300" height="218" src="https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/08/A-central-Aleppo-street-after-a-barrel-bomb-attack.-August-2014.-photo-by-Shelly-Kittleson-300x218.jpg" class="attachment-medium size-medium wp-post-image" alt="" decoding="async" loading="lazy" srcset="https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/08/A-central-Aleppo-street-after-a-barrel-bomb-attack.-August-2014.-photo-by-Shelly-Kittleson-300x218.jpg 300w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/08/A-central-Aleppo-street-after-a-barrel-bomb-attack.-August-2014.-photo-by-Shelly-Kittleson-1024x747.jpg 1024w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/08/A-central-Aleppo-street-after-a-barrel-bomb-attack.-August-2014.-photo-by-Shelly-Kittleson-629x459.jpg 629w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/08/A-central-Aleppo-street-after-a-barrel-bomb-attack.-August-2014.-photo-by-Shelly-Kittleson-900x656.jpg 900w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">A central Aleppo street after a barrel bomb attack, August 2014. Credit: Shelly Kittleson/IPS</p></font></p><p>By Shelly Kittleson<br />ALEPPO, Syria, Aug 16 2014 (IPS) </p><p>Volunteer civil defence units operating here in Syria’s largest city careen through crater-pocked routes of precariously hanging, pancaked concrete where barrel bombs have struck.<span id="more-136168"></span></p>
<p>Greyish dust blankets the dead, the alive and the twisted steel jutting out.  The panicked confusion immortalised in innumerable photos – with bloodied survivors raking desperately through the rubble for loved ones – is granted a modicum of order by the arrival of the rescue teams, in their distinctive white hard hats and black knee pads and boots.</p>
<p>When IPS arrived on the scene a few moments after the explosion of one such barrel bomb in early August, the men were already there, looking for survivors amid the rubble. One stood ready ear glued to his walkie-talkie, eyes darting between onlookers he was trying to keep at a safe distance and the sky – the first barrel bomb is almost always followed by another within 10-30 minutes, targeting would-be rescuers.One [rescue worker] stood ready, ear glued to his walkie-talkie, eyes darting between onlookers he was trying to keep at a safe distance and the sky – the first barrel bomb is almost always followed by another within 10-30 minutes, targeting would-be rescuers<br /><font size="1"></font></p>
<p>The Hanano civil defence centre in eastern Aleppo is a repurposed school, its corridors dusty and empty except for a few firemen’s boots airing out, a broom, and a few morale-boosting posters of the civil defence men in uniform.</p>
<p>Body bags and trauma kits sit alongside fuel for Bobcat excavating and rubble-clearing equipment, pickaxes with USAID logos on them, drills and boxes of firemen’s suits, propped up against chalkboards still bearing the marks of lessons once taught in them.</p>
<p>Many of the men are in their twenties, clean-shaven, former university students. Khaled Hijjo, a former law student in his mid-twenties and head of the centre, told IPS that the rescue and fire teams work in two shifts: 12 hours on, 12 hours off.</p>
<p>At the moment there is only one medical specialist at the centre, he said, so this specialist is on call 24 hours a day. The man, who did not give his name, said he had worked for the Syrian Red Crescent even prior to the 2011 uprising and subsequent violence, but that he had no time to train the other men in basic first aid.</p>
<p>Correct carry and extraction procedures prevent aggravating injuries, including paralysing spinal injuries, and the heavy equipment received has proven vital to remove rubble and save those trapped underneath.</p>
<p>For the past four months, the rescue workers have been receiving a salary from the government-in-exile and courses from a number of foreign bodies and governments.</p>
<p>Entry-level first responders are given a salary of 175 dollars, while the heads of the various centres instead receive 200, civil defence chief and former English teacher Ammar Salmo told IPS, adding that 21 members of the team had been killed by barrel bombs while on duty.</p>
<p>When the bombs bring down entire buildings, ‘’many are trapped and nothing can be done. There are five still alive in one area that we know of, but there is no way to get them out’’, one local media activist told IPS, saying he felt helpless, and that taking pictures of the dead and wounded had ceased to make him feel useful</p>
<p>Though many of the local media activists have been given expensive cameras and satellite equipment and attended training programmes funded by Western nations in southern Turkey, virtually none of them seem to have had any basic first aid training.</p>
<p>Given the extremely severe shortage of trained medical staff left in Aleppo after the <a href="http://physiciansforhumanrights.org/press/press-releases/new-map-shows-government-forces-deliberately-attacking-syrias-medical-system.html">repeated attacking </a>of medical facilities by the regime, the civil defence teams play an even more vital role in saving lives.</p>
<p>Ambulances donated from abroad and brought in through the sole supply road still under rebel control into the city go with the first responder team in central Aleppo, while those injured in the surrounding countryside are taken in cars to the nearest first aid centre. Communication is possible only via walkie-talkie, because there is no mobile phone reception.</p>
<p>A training centre was recently established inside Syrian territory but outside of the city, where team members were attending 20-day training sessions a few at a time, said Salmo.</p>
<p>He added that more civil defence centres were currently being set up in the Idlib region further to the west, and that it was proving easier to manage them than those in Aleppo, because many of the men ‘’were regime defectors and are more familiar with how institutions work.’’</p>
<p>He said the deputy chief of civil defence was a former regime general, and that four other former generals are currently working with them.</p>
<p>Of the instructors at the training centre, Salmo told IPS,  ‘’five are defectors from Assad’s forces, including a general teaching how to deal with barrel bombs and fire, and two doctors serve as medical experts to train the men in first aid.’’</p>
<p>The group has experienced some minor problems with some of the armed groups. One team member also told IPS that some of the heavy equipment had been ‘’borrowed’’ for a day by a Free Syrian Army group a few weeks earlier, but that they had promised that they would return it soon.</p>
<p>‘’We’re trying to solve the matter through dialogue,’’ he said.</p>
<p>When asked whether the group had had problems with the more extremist groups such as the Al-Qaeda affiliate Jabhat Al-Nusra, he scoffed, saying ‘’Jabhat Al-Nusra doesn’t need our things. They already have enough money.’’</p>
<p>No fire engines or other emergency vehicles could be seen in the immediate vicinity of a civil defence centre near a front line where IPS spoke to Salmo, who said that the teams had to be careful.</p>
<p>‘’Once you are seen as more organised,’’ he noted, ‘’you’re also seen as more of a danger to the regime.’’</p>
<p>(Edited by <a href="http://www.ips.org/institutional/our-global-structure/biographies/phil-harris/">Phil Harris</a>)</p>
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		<title>Aleppo Struggles to Provide for Basic Needs as Regime Closes In</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 11 Aug 2014 06:37:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Shelly Kittleson</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ipsnews.net/?p=136044</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The single, heavily damaged supply road remaining into the rebel-held, eastern area of the city is acutely exposed to enemy fire. All lorries with wheat for the areas’ underground bakeries, soap for hygiene purposes, and fuel for vehicles and generators travel by this route. While snipers focus on this road and other frontlines throughout the [&#8230;]]]></description>
		
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font color="#999999"><img width="300" height="211" src="https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/08/Syrian-boy-brings-bread-back-from-underground-bakery-in-severly-damaged-opposition-held-area-of-Aleppo.-August-2014.-photo-credit-Shelly-KittlesonIPS-300x211.jpg" class="attachment-medium size-medium wp-post-image" alt="" decoding="async" loading="lazy" srcset="https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/08/Syrian-boy-brings-bread-back-from-underground-bakery-in-severly-damaged-opposition-held-area-of-Aleppo.-August-2014.-photo-credit-Shelly-KittlesonIPS-300x211.jpg 300w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/08/Syrian-boy-brings-bread-back-from-underground-bakery-in-severly-damaged-opposition-held-area-of-Aleppo.-August-2014.-photo-credit-Shelly-KittlesonIPS-1024x721.jpg 1024w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/08/Syrian-boy-brings-bread-back-from-underground-bakery-in-severly-damaged-opposition-held-area-of-Aleppo.-August-2014.-photo-credit-Shelly-KittlesonIPS-629x443.jpg 629w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/08/Syrian-boy-brings-bread-back-from-underground-bakery-in-severly-damaged-opposition-held-area-of-Aleppo.-August-2014.-photo-credit-Shelly-KittlesonIPS-900x634.jpg 900w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Syrian boy carries bread back from underground bakery in severely damaged opposition-held area of Aleppo (August 2014). Credit: Shelly Kittleson/IPS</p></font></p><p>By Shelly Kittleson<br />ALEPPO, Syria, Aug 11 2014 (IPS) </p><p>The single, heavily damaged supply road remaining into the rebel-held, eastern area of the city is acutely exposed to enemy fire.<span id="more-136044"></span></p>
<p>All lorries with wheat for the areas’ underground bakeries, soap for hygiene purposes, and fuel for vehicles and generators travel by this route. While snipers focus on this road and other frontlines throughout the city, regime barrel bombing is meanwhile steadily, painfully reducing the rest of the city to rubble.</p>
<p>Although many areas are now under the control of the more moderate Islamic Front, Al-Qaeda affiliate Jabhat Al-Nusra helps provide for basic needs in some areas where the underfunded Syrian National Council-linked administration is unable to do so.While snipers focus on this road [the only remaining supply road into the rebel-held, eastern area of the city] and other frontlines throughout the city, regime barrel bombing is meanwhile steadily, painfully reducing the rest of the city to rubble<br /><font size="1"></font></p>
<p>IPS watched as members of the armed group handed out metre-long rectangular blocks of ice, after they slid down a metal shaft to armed men waiting to give them to inhabitants waiting nearby who have been without electricity and running water for months.</p>
<p>‘’They’re good people,’’ said one inhabitant of the city, who nonetheless had been arrested by them for undisclosed reasons a few months back. ‘’They’re friends.’’</p>
<p>In private, however, many Syrians will say that they are not happy with the group, though it is ‘’not anywhere near as bad as ‘Daeesh’ (the Islamic State, formerly known as ISIS).”</p>
<p>Inside the Aleppo city council offices, bright red filing cabinets and a new coat of white paint mark a sharp contrast with the crumbling buildings and concrete slabs hanging precariously above streets where those left continue to go about their daily affairs as best they can.</p>
<p>‘’We have been hit many times, but we need to show that we will keep rebuilding,’’ one employee said.</p>
<p>Council chief Abdelaziz Al-Maghrebi, a former teacher and manager at a textile factory, walks with a limp from what he says was an injury from a tank bomb never properly treated.</p>
<p>The council has civil registry, education, legal affairs and civil defence directorates &#8211; and an office for electricity, water, sewage, and rubbish – but often receives no money from the ‘government-in-exile’, said Mohammed Saidi, financial manager of the council.</p>
<p>‘’The amount of money depends on the month, and no money was received from the SNC in July.’’</p>
<p>However, Saidi stressed, all reports of siphoning off of money by members ‘’are false’’.</p>
<p>Private donors and foundations play a large part in the council’s budget as well, and ‘’funding depends on the project proposals that are accepted’’, he said.</p>
<p>One of the recent proposals was for underground shelters, which the head of the civil defence directorate – established at the council only recently after long acting as an entirely volunteer force – told IPS had been granted four months ago, and 16 of which had since been built.</p>
<p>For medical needs, doctor Ibrahim Alkhalil, head of the Aleppo health directorate for rebel areas, said that as doctors and hospitals continue to be targeted, the location of medical facilities ‘’has to be kept confidential and change frequently’’.</p>
<p>The doctor, who is Syrian but who spent most of his professional career in Saudi Arabia and only came back after the uprising started, noted that everything was in short supply or lacking entirely: antibiotics, water, electricity and trained staff.</p>
<p>He added that the lack of maintenance for vehicles and the terrible road conditions meant that many people were dying simply from being unable to reach the few existing medical centres.</p>
<p>Moreover, the local council can afford to provide funds only to some medical facilities that do not receive any from other donors, council chief Al-Maghrebi told IPS.</p>
<p>Alkhalil pointed out, however, that no amount of supplies would solve the main problem if ‘’the regime isn’t stopped from killing and injuring in the first place.’’</p>
<p>A truck with lights switched off to avoid attracting regime aircraft attention often makes its way through the streets of a central neighbourhood at night, calling out ‘haleeb’, ‘haleeb’ (‘milk’).</p>
<p>A number of children in the area have been hit by snipers while crossing a street now ‘protected’ by a bullet-riddled sheet of canvas meant to reduce visibility.</p>
<p>In another area, Salahheddin – the ‘first liberated area of Aleppo’ and the very name of which retains a sort of mythical status in the eyes of some – children laugh and play soccer in the empty street near the frontline after nightfall. The blood of a boy hit by a sniper recently still stains the ground nearby.</p>
<p>Despite the constant risk of government snipers, IPS was told, near the frontlines was often the ‘’safest place, since it is too close to regime areas for them to drop barrel bombs on.’’</p>
<p>IPS was asked by a freckled, red-haired boy barely out of his late teens now working for a local Muslim, ‘’Why have you come here? What is there left to say?’’</p>
<p>The boy works to get charities abroad to help his organisation provide 50 dollars per month to the neediest widows and orphans of those killed in the fighting and for food packages.</p>
<p>A barrel bomb outside the charity’s offices killed a good friend and co-worker about 15 days ago. Sandbags are now stacked in front of windows and, according to another volunteer, over half of the staff left immediately after the incident, either for other parts of the country or for Turkey – or they simply no longer come to the office out of fear, a niqab-clad woman also working at the organisation said.</p>
<p>The charity has an underground bakery with which it normally provides bread to those in need, but its equipment had broken down a few days prior to IPS’s visit. It was unclear when it would be fixed, whether the spare parts needed could be brought into the city, and whether the regime might soon take the one road left in.</p>
<p>(Edited by <a href="http://www.ips.org/institutional/our-global-structure/biographies/phil-harris/">Phil Harris</a>)</p>
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