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Palestinian Child Injured by Bullet Fire in Syria

Published : 03-01-2020

Palestinian Child Injured by Bullet Fire in Syria

Five-year-old Palestinian child Mustafa Rami, raised in Syria’s Jaramana refugee camp, in Rif Dimashq, was injured by bullet fire on the New Year’s eve.

The Emergency Department at Syria’s Health Ministry said on Wednesday that one person died and 18 others sustained wounds in a random gunshooting incident.

AGPS has kept record of the death of 250 Palestinian refugee children in war-torn Syria until June 2019.

Children make up over 6% of the overall death toll among the Palestinians of Syria, estimated at 4,013.

Thousands of children have gone orphaned after they lost one or both of their parents in the deadly warfare.

The warfare in Syria has had traumatic fallouts on Palestinian refugee children in and outside of Syria. Post-traumatic stress disorders, mental psychosis, sleeplessness and nightmares, eating disorders, and intense fear have all been reported among Palestinian children from Syria.

AGPS renews its calls to the international community, human rights institutions, UNICEF, UNRWA, and all concerned bodies to work on protecting Palestinian children in embattled zones.

Short URL : https://actionpal.org.uk/en/post/9563

Five-year-old Palestinian child Mustafa Rami, raised in Syria’s Jaramana refugee camp, in Rif Dimashq, was injured by bullet fire on the New Year’s eve.

The Emergency Department at Syria’s Health Ministry said on Wednesday that one person died and 18 others sustained wounds in a random gunshooting incident.

AGPS has kept record of the death of 250 Palestinian refugee children in war-torn Syria until June 2019.

Children make up over 6% of the overall death toll among the Palestinians of Syria, estimated at 4,013.

Thousands of children have gone orphaned after they lost one or both of their parents in the deadly warfare.

The warfare in Syria has had traumatic fallouts on Palestinian refugee children in and outside of Syria. Post-traumatic stress disorders, mental psychosis, sleeplessness and nightmares, eating disorders, and intense fear have all been reported among Palestinian children from Syria.

AGPS renews its calls to the international community, human rights institutions, UNICEF, UNRWA, and all concerned bodies to work on protecting Palestinian children in embattled zones.

Short URL : https://actionpal.org.uk/en/post/9563