At least 160 displaced families live under harsh living conditions with no aid or care in the Ya’rub camp in Kurdish-held areas in northeastern Raqqa province, a local news site said Friday.
The Ein Al-Furat network said that, similar to a few months ago, aid was once again delayed, with the displaced families in the camp left without bread.
The suffering of the people of the Yarub, which is one of the random camps in the western countryside of al-Raqqa, reveals the extent of the lack of aid that reaches them, which according to the network, has been recently absent.
About 160 families live in the camp, most of them displaced from the eastern countryside of Deir Ezzor and the countryside of Homs and Hama, which are under the control of Iranian militias and the Assad regime.
Humanitarian and relief organizations are supposed to provide assistance to the inhabitants of the camps, with Blumont, a global organization, responsible for providing them with bread.
“The organizations showed no regard to the camp, which holds nearly 1,000 people, which made our lives more difficult considering the crisis that the country is going through,” one resident of the camp said.
“The price of flour reaches 75,000 liras at times, which some families cannot afford, adding insult to injury.”
According to Human Rights Watch (HRW), there are 6.1 million internally displaced people across the country, with 900,000 having been displaced by mid-February due to hostilities in Idlib.
Zaman Al Wasl
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