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The thousands of Omran Daqneeshes I have seen

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The thousands of Omran Daqneeshes I have seen


http://www.middleeasteye.net/columns/thousands-omran-daqneeshes-i-have-seen-38494642

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Syrian children are suffering the wrath of this war. What sort of future are we giving them, asks Syria-based aid worker Tauqir Sharif

There are many Omran Daqneeshes. In fact, many children in worse condition than Omran. Some killed, some blown to pieces, children whose names are unknown and families who have lost all their children in a single explosion.

One image will stay with me forever: I remember a father losing five of his daughters in a blast. He was screaming and scrambling to pull one of his daughters from the rubble and we were trying to help him.

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Omran Daqneesh


When we pulled her out, it was very similar to Omran. We managed to get her from the rubble and her father took her from our hands and held her against his shoulder.

She was covered in dust, but when he lifted her up, blood began pouring down her face and onto his shoulders as he was walking away. I will always remember that image. It lingers in my mind.

There are thousands – hundreds of thousands – of children in Syria who are wounded or killed on a daily basis. Women and children are the ones mostly enduring the wrath of the Russian, Iranian and Syrian regimes.

Last week, I recorded one of the most painful sights I have had to witnesses in my life. Six children – all cousins – were playing in the street in Aleppo when they were hit by a cluster bomb. I’ve seen a lot of children die, but never like this.

I was at the hospital when the children arrived – it’s one of the only hospitals in the area that can deal with internal medicine. We had a guy suffering from a heart attack, a guy having an epileptic seizure and another who who had just been electrocuted.

When the children arrived they were high priority, so we literally had to wheel the other people into the hall. It was chaos. Everyone, doormen and cleaners, was holding children, trying to stop the blood from their wounds. I’ve never seen anything like the harrowing chaos that unfolded before my eyes.

Syria’s children have been damaged by the war – most suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder. Every child here has family members who are amputees or have been killed or have suffered profoundly in the war, so it’s difficult for them and we want to change that.

That is why we have many youth projects on the ground where we take children to play football, where we do karate and other activities. We want them to feel like children again and don’t want them to think about war.

Many children need counselling, but they don’t have access to it. After five years of war, many are not in school, a direct impact of the war. Five years on, there are children who cannot read and write and that’s very sad.

I am a bit frustrated, but I am also glad that Omran’s image has finally touched the heart of the world.

The question is, what is to be done about it? Is he going to be another Alan Kurdi, washed up on a beach so people could see his heartbreaking image for a while, feel some empathy, then forget about the terrible situation in Syria?

Action must be taken. The impact on children is serious and deep, and we have to think about the future we are leaving for them, the future we are handing to these children.


- Tauqir Sharif has been based in Syria since 2012 and runs the Syria-based aid organisation Live Updates from Syria.

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.

Photo: A photo of Tauqir Sharif in Aleppo in August 2016 (Facebook/Tauqir Shafir)

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This british born muslim is in syria for the past 4 years doing humanitarian work and risking his life for the syrian people. May Allah (swt) bless him and his family and may Allah (swt) reward him on both this life and the next. These are real people risking their life everyday for saving human life and they are only doing this because of their love for the ummah and for gaining the pleasure of Allah (swt).

Take a look at this video where he describes life in war torn syria. The journalist in the video is one of the few if not the only western journalist in Syria.




@Zarvan @Apprentice @Malik Abdullah @Aslan @Tipu7 @T-Rex @Al-zakir @tesla @Yellow-place @dsr478 @bsruzm @CrimsonFury @Zulkarneyn @HAKIKAT @Jamaal Yelmaaz @jamal18 @LeGenD @Arefin007 @Stannis Baratheon @asad71 @monitor @Psychic @kobiraaz @Indus Falcon @Djinn @lastofthepatriots @war&peace @Saiful Islam @django @Sparkle229 @Mrc @alarabi @Decisive Storm


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The "moderate rebels" beheaded a 12 year old boy quite recently.
 
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Exclusive: British aid worker risks his life to save people in Syrian city of Aleppo

http://www.itv.com/news/2016-08-15/exclusive-dangers-of-posed-to-aid-convoys-reaching-syria-exposed/


A convoy led by a British aid worker has successfully made its way to the Syrian city of Aleppo, highlighting the dangers along the narrow corridor into the besieged city, ITV News can reveal.

Despite the recent breaking of the siege, the extent of the dangers have kept most of the badly needed assistance stranded outside.

Tauqir 'Tox' Sharif spent five days attempting to reach the city, driving an old ambulance from the UK as part of a three-vehicle convoy carrying much-needed food and medicine for an area that has been under siege since the start of July.

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Mr Sharif, from East London, had to camouflage the yellow vehicle in mud to try to avoid attack.

As he drove through the ravaged streets "scared" for his life, he caught on camera explosions adding to the devastation that has left the city in ruins.

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"Look there's been an explosion as we're driving down this road into Aleppo," said Tox, pointing out of the window of his battered van.

"You can see the whole place is smashed. And at the same time there's been an explosion just on the next street from us."

"It's really important to understand that it is not safe bringing aid into Aleppo. Look at this road, it is completely smashed. Everywhere, look at the cars, look at the shrapnel. There are planes in the sky right now. We're being hit. Look at the smoke."

The danger of the task he has undertaken becomes all too apparent, when loud bangs can be heard as the traffic grinds to a halt at a tunnel on the approach to Aleppo.


The camera swings around inside the gloomy tunnel, and appears to show men with guns firing right behind them.

They escape. For now.

Tox soon has to abandon his battered van after the convoy is hit by a cluster bomb.

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On the approach to Aleppo, the devastation shows no sign of letting up.

"Look at this place man, look at this place," says an exasperated Tox on the back of a pick-up truck.

"You can see this is what we have to do to get aid into those people that are being choked."

On Friday, after five days of trying, Tox's aid convoy finally reaches Aleppo.

A young boy can be seen clutching a few tins of food.

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After delivering around three tonnes of aid, Tox spent Friday night in a local hospital.

Earlier this month, he documented for ITV News what it's like working in the dire conditions of Aleppo's hospitals, where the threat of being bombed and the battle to save lives with the most basic of equipment is constant.

At around 6.30 am on Saturday morning, the hospital was struck with six airstrikes, taking out three generators.

It came a week after the UN issued a fresh appeal for a 48-hour ceasefire in Aleppo to allow aid workers in to help the two million people in desperate need.
"We've just been hit at the hospital," Tox shouts in horror, as he films the immediate aftermath outside his window.

Running down the stairwell, he emerges onto a street filled with smoke and dust.

"We're being targeted right now, the whole world needs to know, that hospitals are being hit" Tox says, making his way through the rubble.

"Civilians are being killed, you can hear children screaming and crying.

"We've been here less than 24 hours and the hospital's been hit. We're covered in dust. The hospital now has no power. One person has been killed and a small child injured."

Tox works for the charity: Live Updates from Syria
 
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Women and children are the ones mostly enduring the wrath of the Russian, Iranian and Syrian regimes.
that is a misnomer, they are unfortunate collateral damage in Russo-Syrian anti terror operations.

Syrian rebels = coward jihadis who hide behind women and children and use them as human shields, shame on them.
 
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The "moderate rebels" beheaded a 12 year old boy quite recently.

Iraqi Shi'ite Militias whom you support behead Sunni children whenever they can.
This video was published long before your Media bastards reported about that 19 YEARS old Assad's 'child' SOLDIER .. and none of the western Hypocrite bastards opened his filthy ugly mouth.

Iraqi Shi'ite Army & Militias Executing Sunni Boy.

Mar 4, 2015

 
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Two brothers embrace each other after finding out their brother was killed in an airstrike in Aleppo

 
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