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UN says it has reports of starvation in Syria’s besieged Deir Ezzor

By Reuters - Jan 17,2016 - Last updated at Jan 17,2016

GENEVA — Unverified reports say 15 to 20 people died of starvation in the Syrian city of Deir Ezzor last year, the United Nations said on Saturday, warning that 200,000 residents there face a severe food shortage and sharply deteriorating conditions.

Western parts of the city have been under siege by Daesh militants since last March, leaving inhabitants with no electricity for more than 10 months and a water supply for only three hours a week, the UN said in a report.

Deir Ezzor is the most populous of about 15 besieged areas in Syria, where about 450,000 people are trapped and cut off from aid by the government, Daesh and other insurgent groups involved in the country's civil war.

Another besieged population, 42,000 people trapped in the town of Madaya, has received two convoys of aid supplies this month, but local aid workers have reported 32 deaths from starvation.

There have been no flights into the Deir Ezzor airport except by helicopter since September and malnutrition is widespread, according to the United Nations.

"Severe cases of malnutrition are reported by health personnel particularly amongst children with unverified reports of 15 - 20 people dying from starvation in 2015 [of whom four were children]," it said.

"All schools are functioning in the city, however, absenteeism amongst children is common as children suffer from frequent fainting due to malnutrition," it added.

Daesh militants "interrogate and harass people leaving the city and confiscate their documents", while the Syrian government "requires those wishing to leave by land or air to obtain authorisation", the report said.

A government grain reserve and a very small patch of government-controlled land can continue to provide grain for two main functioning bakeries for "many months", but a lack of fuel and yeast has boosted black-market bread prices to eight times the price in the capital, Damascus.

 

"Families have to queue for hours to get their share of bread with the majority of inhabitants surviving on bread and water," said the report from the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

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