ALEPPO — Mohammed Abu Rdan has known nothing but conflict throughout his short life.
Born in rural Aleppo in 2011 when peaceful protests against President Bashar al-Assad’s government began, his childhood is anything but typical.
The protests quickly turned into a multi-sided conflict that has sucked in world powers, killed hundreds of thousands of people and displaced millions more and with it upended Abu Rdan’s life.
Now living in a displaced peoples’ camp in northern Aleppo, Abu Rdan has become his family’s main breadwinner after heart disease rendered his father unfit to work.
Like for many other Syrian children, school has become a distant dream.
“We had a house and I used to go to school every day… but we came here… they destroyed our house and our school,” Abu Rdan said.
The United Nations’ International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF) said earlier this month that 90 percent of children in the country are in need of humanitarian assistance, a 20 percent increase over the past year alone.
“Grave violations”
Ten years into the conflict, almost 2.45 million children in Syria and an additional 750,000 Syrian children in neighboring countries are out of school, UNICEF figures show.
Abu Rdan wakes up at dawn every day and braves the cold to stand by the side of the highway and hitch a ride for the 10 kms (6.2 miles) to the cleaning products factory where he works.
His long working days, mostly up to 10 hours, earn him 100 Turkish liras ($13) a month. It is all the income his family makes.
Abu Rdan is paid in Turkey’s currency as he lives and works in an area controlled by Turkish-backed rebels, having fled from his hometown, the village of Marshoureen, which is now government-held.
Assad now holds sway over many parts of the country, helped by Russia’s military and Iran’s Shi’a militias, but Turkey, which backed rebels who sought to overthrow him, has power over swathes of territory in the northwest.
UNICEF says more than 75 percent of grave violations against children recorded in Syria in 2020 — including killing, maiming, recruitment into fighting, sexual violence and attacks on schools — were in the northwest.
Packing goods into large sacks, some of them twice his size, Abu Rdan is so exhausted by the time he goes back home he can do nothing but eat and sleep.
“When I come back from work I’m so tired, I just put my head down and I’m out,” he said.
He shares a tent with his parents and three sisters that does little to shield them from Syria’s harsh winter, which includes torrential rain and snow.
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