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Twenty-three
people have died of starvation in the besieged Syrian town of Madaya
since December 1, Doctors Without Borders said Friday, as the United
Nations prepared an aid delivery to the area.
The UN said there were 40,000 people,
half of them children, who needed immediate lifesaving assistance in
Madaya, where access has been restricted by pro-regime forces.
Damascus on Thursday gave permission for
UN agencies to send relief to the town, following reports of starvation
deaths among civilians, many of whom have been displaced from the
neighbouring rebel stronghold of Zabadani.
Doctors Without Borders, known by its
French acronym (MSF), said that of the 23 people who died of starvation,
six were less than a year old, and five were above 60.
The deaths occurred at the local MSF-supported health centre, the charity said.
Another 13 people who tried to escape in
search of food have been killed when they stepped on landmines laid by
regime forces or were shot by snipers, according to the Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights, a British-based monitoring group.
“This is a clear example of the
consequences of using siege as a military strategy,” MSF’s operations
director Brice de le Vingne said in a statement.
Medics had been forced to feed children
with medical syrups as the only available source of sugar and energy, he
said, describing Madaya as “effectively an open air prison” for nearly
half of its residents.
“There is no way in or out, leaving the people to die.”
MSF welcomed the decision from Damascus
to allow food supplies, but stressed that “an immediate life-saving
delivery of medicine across the siege line should also be a priority.”
In Geneva, UN agencies said the aid
convoy would head to Madaya in the coming days, although the specifics
were still being finalised.
“The situation is ghastly,” said UN
rights office spokesman Rupert Colville, indicating that details of the
casualties and the extent of the suffering in Madaya were difficult to
verify given the limited access.
Despite numerous UN requests, Madaya last received humanitarian assistance in October.
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