انشاء عبارات سهل بسيط قطعة معلومات عامة شاملة
بسيطة مبسط نبذة عن الاقتصاد السكان جمل عن بلادي كلمة رحلة مقال جمهورية دولة حول تكاليف المعيشه السياحة للطلاب عرض للصف السادس
للصف الاول للصف الثاني للصف الثالث للصف الرابع للصف الخامس للصف السادس للصف السابع
للصف الثامن للصف التاسع للصف العاشر ابتدائي
جمل سهل وقصير معالم موقع تقرير
عن تراث بالانجليزي ابي موضوع ابراج خمس جمل
قديما أبرز المناطق السياحية مختصر حول الحياة
والعادات والتقاليد فى لمحة تعريفية بالانجلش
تلخيص قصير كلمة تحدث تقرير انجليزي عن اي
دوله مقدمة خاتمة information about paragraph
presentation location my country كم عدد سكان
مدن الوجهات العرب المسافرون نقاط الاهتمام
مساحة تحدث جغرافية جغرافيا عبارات شعر قصيدة
مؤثر كلام قصير مترجم بالعربي شكل عام موضوع
مؤثر اللغات الرسمية ديانة اسماء مدن المناطق الريفيه الشعب الجنس رئيس لغتها الرسمية
قوانين موقع الوطن عادات وتقاليد بحث علمي
تعبير تقرير برجراف فقرة برزنتيشن بحث موضوع ملخص
جاهز باللغة الانجليزية
Poverty
UNICEF estimates that about 7 million
Syrian children live in poverty. International trade sanctions imposed since
anti-regime protests began in March 2011, have had a negative impact on the
socio-economic situation of the civilian population. Sanctions limited state
revenue, which limited the resources available to pay public sector employees.
This caused a significant reduction in the income of several families.
In addition, these sanctions were partly
responsible for the increase in the price level of basic necessities. This
significantly increased the pressure on families who spent most of their income
on these goods. In 2015, according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) and the World Food Program (WFP), 9.8 million Syrians are
food insecure.
Child labor
According to Syrian domestic law, it is
illegal to employ minors until they have completed basic education or become 15
years of age - regardless of the condition first attained. Child labor was a
problem before the war in Syria, but the humanitarian crisis that followed
exacerbated the problem. Whether in Syria or in neighboring countries, children
are now forced to work in conditions that are mentally, physically and socially
dangerous.
In Syria, children may be sent away from
their families in other parts of the country or in neighboring countries to
receive income, avoid being recruited by armed groups, or avoid being injured
in the conflict. Families struggling for their livelihoods are often forced to
send their children to work, marry their young daughters, or allow their
children to be recruited by armed groups. Children work in agriculture,
carpentry, restaurants, street vendors, wash cars, collect bins, or beg.
In Syria, at the center of the conflict,
children (especially boys) are also recruited as soldiers by all parties to the
conflict, often without parental consent, and half of them are under 15 years
of age. These children participate directly in the fighting and can be used to
kill, or are assigned to positions that put their lives in danger.
With regard to refugee children, the
situation is also urgent. In 2015, according to the UN, 70% of Syrian refugees
in Lebanon live below the poverty line. In 2016, in Jordan, 90% of refugees
live below the national poverty line, and 67% of families are in debt (UNHCR).
Since the adult refugees are unable to be part of the legal labor market in
neighboring countries, they are forced to join the illegal market by taking the
risk of being imprisoned, penalized or sent back to Syria. In such a desperate
situation, they are forced to turn to the help of their own children. It is
difficult to estimate the number of Syrian refugee children who work as
families and employers hide the problem for fear of the consequences, but a report
by UNICEF and Save the Children counted in 2015, between 13 and 34% of children
between 7 and 17 are working in the Za'atari refugee camp in Jordan.
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