Protesters express their anger by wrapping their dead in UN shrouds
Activists in besieged Eastern Ghouta have taken to wrapping dead bodies in United Nations banners to express residents' "frustration"
with the international community, activist monitoring group the Damascus Media Center told Reporters.
One such photo,
showing two children wrapped in the flag of the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR), made
the rounds on social media over the weekend. Activist Rami Jarrah said the children had died in an airstrike on Saturday night. Reporters has been unable to contact the photographer to verify the assertion.
Activists used
UN banners as shrouds to express their frustrations with the organization,
according to activist sources.
Activists said
they received the photo from a group inside Eastern Ghouta, one of the last
rebel-held enclaves in Syria. Nearly 600 people are believed to have died and more than 2,000 injured in Syrian government air and ground strikes there since
an offensive began February 18, according to the United Nations. Nearly 400,000 people are believed to be trapped inside the enclave.
Since the UN
Security Council unanimously voted for a ceasefire in Syria one week ago,
violence has escalated, according to the UN Regional Coordinator for the Syrian
crisis Panos Moumtzis. "Instead of a much-needed reprieve, we continue to see more fighting, more death, and more disturbing reports of hunger and hospitals being bombed," Moumtzis said in a statement on Sunday.
"This collective punishment of civilians is simply unacceptable," he
said.
Jarrah said the
photo offers a vivid illustration of the plight facing people in Eastern
Ghouta.
The media shows the extent to which these people
are desperate, where they're not thinking about their children that just died.
They're thinking about the possibility of 400,000 people dying," he said.
In two tweets,
UNHCR Communications Chief Melissa Fleming wrote: "The @UN humanitarian community, which includes 450 of my colleagues in Syria, has been doing everything within their power to reach people in need - the blame for all the
suffering lies with those who deny access or drop bombs on children."
UNHCR officials told Media that the tweets were the organization's
official response to the photo.https://www.semperdiamondlodge.com
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