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No-fly zone necessary in Syria, doctor from Aleppo says

Syrian American Medical Society physician says no-fly zones easy to set up, international community should push for it

December 4, 2016 at 11:34 am

Syrians living in Aleppo flee the city due to ongoing regime forces attacks and move to opposition controlled areas on December 1, 2016 [Ibrahim Ebu Leys/Anadolu Agency]

A medical doctor on Friday urged the international community to set up a no-fly zone in northern Syria to allow for humanitarian aid and treating victims in the war-torn country that now has few hospitals.

“We are pushing for a no-fly zone as the majority of the victims are because of the airstrikes – almost two-thirds,” Syrian American Medial Society (SAMS) Vice President Dr. Basel Termanini said during a discussion at New York University’s (NYU) Washington DC campus.

Those no-fly zones are very simple [to set up] and the international community should be pushing hard for that.

The Aleppo-born doctor said it is the first time in the 21st century that starvation has been used as a weapon of war and is especially being used in Aleppo.

An official from SAMS who wanted to remain anonymous told Anadolu Agency that the organization is currently using small clinics and mobile clinics to treat the wounded.

“They have a smaller capacity and [medical staff] just try to set up [clinics] in basements [of the bombed buildings],” the official said.

According to several reports from Syria, hospitals are no longer operating in Aleppo and very few are in other parts of northern Syria.

Termanini said although the situation in Syria appears to be complex, it had a very simple reason he described as a fight between a dictator and ordinary citizens who want democracy and freedom.

He said he expects Daesh not to stay in Syria as the brutal culture of the militant group was not the culture of the ancient nation where people from different religions lived in peace for thousands of years until the Assad family took rule and misused power.

Having visited Syrian refugee camps in different countries, Termanini said Turkey was doing a great job providing good facilities, technologies and even work permits to residents.

He compared conditions in Turkey with those in Lebanon where refugees pay for their own tents inside camps and are forced to leave the area once they turn 18 years old.

Professor Selcuk Sirin from NYU’s Applied Psychology Department whose work focuses on the psychology of refugee children, said low school enrollment rates of refugees made them targets for recruitment into terror groups like al-Qaeda or Daesh that operate around refugee camps.

Sirin started a project for to help refugee children enrol at Turkish schools by solving language and psychological issues.

With the pilot program set to launch in Turkey’s southeastern city of Sanliurfa next week, his team wants to support children by providing game-based education opportunities.

The panel organized jointly by NYU and the Turkish Heritage Organization was accompanied by an exhibit that featured photographs by 16-year-old Turkish-American activist Sinem Oguz.