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A mother and her children react after two rockets hit the Turkish town
of Kilis near the Syrian border, |
The number of Syrians living below the poverty line has almost
tripled after five years of conflict, according to a report published
this week.
Around 83.4 percent of Syrians
live below the poverty line compared with 28 percent in 2010, the report
by the UN Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA) and
the University of St Andrews said.
An
estimated 13.5 million people in Syria needed humanitarian aid by late
2015, and more than 4 million of these were in Damascus and Aleppo
provinces.
“According to one estimate, life expectancy dropped from 70 in 2010 to 55.4 in 2014,” the report said.
Around half of Syria’s 493 hospitals in 2010 have been seriously damaged in the war, it added.
“The
deliberate targeting of doctors and pharmacists has forced many to flee
the country, at a higher rate than that of the average population.
“As a result, the number of persons per doctor in the country rose from 661 in 2010 to 1,442 in 2015.”
Around 12.1 million Syrians lack adequate access to water, sanitation and waste disposal, the report said.
Destruction of housing and infrastructure was estimated at around $90 billion.
Damaged
pumps and pipelines led to the loss of almost half of potential
drinking water supply in 2015, the Syrian General Establishment for
Drinking Water and Waste Disposal was cited as saying.
Drinking water per capita dropped from 72 cubic meters to 48 cubic meters between 2011 and 2015.
The
numbers were just as bleak in education, with around 2.7 million
children of school-age out of school both inside and outside Syria, the
report said.
The economy contracted by 55 percent between 2010 and 2015, when it had been expected to grow by 32 percent.
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