Translation by Yusra Ahmed
(Zaman Al Wasl)- Hundreds of families are missing among 28 thousand people fled ISIS-captured towns of Mahin and Hawarin in the eastern countryside of Homs province due to the daily barrage of Syrian and Russian airstrikes.
Most of displaced people headed toward the desert while some of them went to Al Qaryatin village and others went to the north of the country, especially those who were able t o afford the cost of transportation which reach to 200 thousand Syrian pounds, according to the activist Kaddor Ben Mahin.
The activist added that the number of missing people is still unknown as no communication means are available with the displaced. Bin Mahin confirmed that most people had settled in the towns of Khnefis, Sawwanah , Sokhna, Raqqa, Mansoora, Albab, Kafernaha, and Dana.
At least 200,000 people have been displaced and more than 700 people have been killed due to the Russia air strikes that began in Sep. 30 in Aleppo, Hama and Homs, and Idlib, monitoring groups said.
The activist reported that many of those displaced are spread over the desert where there was no available means of transportation, besides suffering of hunger, cold, extreme fatigue and fear of bombardment as they were targeted many times by explosive barrels and rocket launchers and artillery by regime forces situated in Sadad town.
Bin Mahin mentioned that activists from Mahin and Hawarin towns had run cars financed by overseas people to look for missing people and help to find them, but the search was difficult because of long distances, lack of transportation and high car rental which exceeded 250 thousand Syrian pounds for a car. "
22 people from Mahin, and 6 from Hawarin besides 3 from Al Qaryatin village were killed, as well as dozens wounded as a result of a rocket while they were queuing in front of a bakery. The warplanes had on Monday raided Alsouraneh village and killed 4 children and dozens wounded.
About 13.5 million people in Syria are now in need of humanitarian assistance and some sort of protection –an increase of 1.2 million in just 10 months, the UN aid chief said.
More than 250,000 people have been killed since Syria's war began in March 2011.
(Zaman Al Wasl)- Hundreds of families are missing among 28 thousand people fled ISIS-captured towns of Mahin and Hawarin in the eastern countryside of Homs province due to the daily barrage of Syrian and Russian airstrikes.
Most of displaced people headed toward the desert while some of them went to Al Qaryatin village and others went to the north of the country, especially those who were able t o afford the cost of transportation which reach to 200 thousand Syrian pounds, according to the activist Kaddor Ben Mahin.
The activist added that the number of missing people is still unknown as no communication means are available with the displaced. Bin Mahin confirmed that most people had settled in the towns of Khnefis, Sawwanah , Sokhna, Raqqa, Mansoora, Albab, Kafernaha, and Dana.
At least 200,000 people have been displaced and more than 700 people have been killed due to the Russia air strikes that began in Sep. 30 in Aleppo, Hama and Homs, and Idlib, monitoring groups said.
The activist reported that many of those displaced are spread over the desert where there was no available means of transportation, besides suffering of hunger, cold, extreme fatigue and fear of bombardment as they were targeted many times by explosive barrels and rocket launchers and artillery by regime forces situated in Sadad town.
Bin Mahin mentioned that activists from Mahin and Hawarin towns had run cars financed by overseas people to look for missing people and help to find them, but the search was difficult because of long distances, lack of transportation and high car rental which exceeded 250 thousand Syrian pounds for a car. "
22 people from Mahin, and 6 from Hawarin besides 3 from Al Qaryatin village were killed, as well as dozens wounded as a result of a rocket while they were queuing in front of a bakery. The warplanes had on Monday raided Alsouraneh village and killed 4 children and dozens wounded.
About 13.5 million people in Syria are now in need of humanitarian assistance and some sort of protection –an increase of 1.2 million in just 10 months, the UN aid chief said.
More than 250,000 people have been killed since Syria's war began in March 2011.
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