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News ID: 4402
Publish Date : 29 August 2014 - 19:30
UN:

ISIL Violence Hits New High in Syria

NEW YORK (Dispatches) – The United Nations has warned that the violence by ISIL Takfiri terrorists against Syrian civilians has reached “to a new level.”
UN's Deputy Humanitarian Chief Kyung-wha Kang told the Security Council on Thursday that the terrorist group has committed "horrific atrocities” in central Syria over the past two weeks.
She added that the terrorists' violent tactics included beheading or crucifying the victims.
"Each day results in more lives lost, and more families and communities destroyed," she said, adding that Syria is plagued by "the rise of extremist groups with complete disregard for even the most basic norms of humanity."
The UN official also warned that terrorists from both ISIL and al-Qaida-linked al-Nusra Front are advancing on border crossings with Turkey.
Kyung-wha said that the rising militancy in Syria is threatening the cross-border humanitarian aid operations.
She added that the civilians in Syria are in dire condition due to the ongoing conflict in the country.
"Over the past six months, the plight of people in Syria has not been reduced but has deepened. The violence and conflict continues unabated with more deaths of women, children, and men. The social and economic fabric of the country has been ripped to shreds," Kyung-wha said.
 
‘Number of Refugees Passes 3m’

NEW YORK (Dispatches) – The UN says the number of Syrian refugees fleeing violence in the country has surpassed three million as the crisis is only getting worse.
In a report released on Friday, the UN’s refugee agency said that Syria’s rising refugee crisis has surpassed a record, with a million people leaving the violence-stricken country in the last 12 months alone.
Syria is now "the biggest humanitarian emergency of our era” with almost half of all Syrians forced to flee their homes, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said.
"One in every eight Syrians has fled across the border, fully a million people more than a year ago. A further 6.5 million are displaced within Syria. Over half of those uprooted are children,” it said.
The UNHCR also noted that the number does not include the hundreds of thousands who have fled without even being registered as refugees.
The report added that the majority of refugees have fled to countries neighboring Syria, with 1.14 million seeking refuge in Lebanon, 815,000 in Turkey, 608,000 in Jordan, 215,369 in Iraq.  More than 150,000 Syrians also sought shelter in North African states, including Egypt.
The UNHCR and other aid agencies say increasing numbers of refugees arriving in Syria’s neighboring states are exhausted and scared, with some having spent a year or more fleeing from village to village inside Syria.
"There are worrying signs too that the journey out of Syria is becoming tougher, with many people forced to pay bribes at armed checkpoints proliferating along the borders. Refugees crossing the desert into eastern Jordan are being forced to pay smugglers hefty sums (ranging from $100 per person or more) to take them to safety,” the UNHCR said.
Syria has been gripped by deadly violence since 2011. According to the UN, over 190,000 people have so far been killed.