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UNICEF, UNRWA Condemn Bombing of Child Friendly Space in Syria’s Khan Eshieh Camp | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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London-The latest attack on Khan Eshieh Refugee Camp, home to Palestinian refugees and internally displaced Syrians, is the latest example in the Syria conflict of the inhumane disregard for life, particularly that of children and infrastructure on which they depend, UNICEF and UNRWA have said in a joint statement.

In one of the latest such attacks, a barrage of bombs hit the Khan Eshieh Camp at night on July 3 reportedly killing civilians and destroying homes as well as a Child Friendly Space. Khan Eshieh camp, home to about 9,000 Palestine refugees is located in a volatile area in the rural area south of Damascus, where spikes in violence have caused the deaths of at least nine Palestine refugees in recent weeks.

The destroyed Child Friendly Space was a point of respite for over 1,000 children who were coming to it daily to engage in education, psychosocial and recreational activities. This was the only Child Friendly Space in the camp where children could go to momentarily overcome the horrors of the violence and the conflict that have defined their lives. Despite the risks, local partners and volunteers continue to serve children in the best way they can, the statement said.

The work of UNRWA and other partners is impeded by the fact that since 2013, humanitarian access to Khan Eshieh has been restricted. To receive assistance, Palestine refugees must travel at great personal risk outside the camp to UNRWA distribution centers in Sahnaya or Khan Dunoun, the two agencies said.

Since 2012, the farms and fields surrounding the camp have been active battlegrounds in which heavy weapons have been deployed with often indiscriminate impact. Some 75 UNRWA staff residing in the camp strive to maintain support to Palestine refugees through limited services offered in three schools, a health clinic, and a community center.

Across Syria, UNICEF, UNRWA and partners continue to support child protection services, including through Child Friendly Spaces, to help children cope with the violence.

Nothing justifies attacks on children and civilian facilities on which they depend. Unfortunately this has become a common feature of the conflict in Syria, said the statement.

UNICEF and UNRWA condemned this attack and called on those responsible to cease actions that endanger civilian life and civilian infrastructure in Syria. Such attacks are prohibited under International Humanitarian Law, they added.