A Syrian refugee mother of four,
desperate to receive food aid, set herself on fire at a U.N. registration
centre in the Lebanese city of Tripoli on Tuesday, witnesses said.
The U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR)
confirmed the incident, adding that the woman in her 50s had been hospitalised
suffering severe burns.
Lebanon has in the past three years
become home to nearly one million people who have fled Syria's brutal war. Many
now live in desperate poverty and rely on overstretched agencies and NGOs for
assistance.
Abu Riad al-Amudi, a cart vendor who
often works near the U.N. registration centre in the northern city, said that
as hundreds of refugees queued for food aid Tuesday morning, a woman dressed in
black from head to toe began to shout.
"She said: 'For three days I
have been coming here to get food assistance for me and my four children. Every
time, I get turned away and promised aid if I come back the next day. But these
promises are empty'," Amudi told AFP.
"Then, with her kids standing
right next to her, she took a small plastic bottle out of her bag, and poured
the contents over her head and clothes. The bottle contained diesel. She took
out a lighter and set herself on fire," said a visibly shaken Amudi.
The vendor said he and other
bystanders including refugees tried to smother the flames with their jackets
and with water.
U.N. guards then intervened, put out
the flames, and took her to hospital, said Abu Riad.
Hospital director Gabriel al-Sabeh
told AFP the refugee had suffered burns to her face and several parts of her
body.
Lying in the hospital bed, weeping
and barely able to speak, the woman told AFP: "My chest hurts. We don't
have any food."
Her face was heavily bandaged and
her feet covered in a protective cloth.
Her husband, Khaled al-Daher, was
stunned.
"We usually receive aid once a
month, but this time it was late," he said.
UNHCR spokeswoman Joelle Eid
confirmed the incident, and said the refugee was in "critical
condition".
She also said U.N. staff were
working to ensure the woman received specialised care, and that they were
investigating the reasons behind the incident. AFP
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