100 days after the earthquakes in Turkey and Syria, the UN believes 6.2 million children need urgent relief

 


The UN children's organisation Unicef said on Wednesday that more than six million children in Syria and Turkey remain in urgent need of assistance 100 days after a strong earthquake and several aftershocks hit the area.

On February 6, a 7.8-magnitude earthquake with thousands of aftershocks rocked south-eastern Turkey and Syria, killing more than 50,000 people and uprooting more than 5.9 million. Children and families who had survived were left homeless, in need, and without access to basic amenities like water.

According to the organisation, 3.7 million people in Syria and 2.5 million children in Turkey both need ongoing humanitarian support as they work to reconstruct their lives.

Unicef's Executive Director Catherine Russell, who visited both nations weeks after the original quakes, claimed that children in both countries had suffered "unimaginable loss and grief" as a result of the earthquakes.

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