Thursday, March 12, 2015

The Staggering Cost Of Syria's Four Year Civil War

Yarmouk residents gather to await food distribution from UNRWA in January 2014. Photo: UNRWA Archives

The Guardian: Syria's war: 80% in poverty, life expectancy cut by 20 years, $200bn lost

A United Nations Development Programme-backed report paints devastating picture of a country after four years of war

The war in Syria has plunged 80% of its people into poverty, reduced life expectancy by 20 years, and led to massive economic losses estimated at over $200 billion since the conflict began in 2010, according to a UN-backed report.

The Syrian Centre for Policy Research painted a devastating picture of the “systematic collapse and destruction” of Syria’s economic foundations in the report, saying the nation’s wealth, infrastructure, institutions and much of its workforce have been “obliterated.”

WNU Editor: Four years of civil war .... I never in my widest nightmares thought that this conflict would last that long. The Syrian Center for Policy Research report is here.

More News On The Staggering Cost Of Syria's Four Year Civil War

New UN-backed report reflects ‘crushing’ impact of conflict in Syria on its people -- UN News Centre
How Four Years of Civil War Has Destroyed Syria -- WSJ
UN-Backed Report Details 'Ruinous' Effects of Syrian War -- VOA
Syrian Life Expectancy Drops Over 20 Years in Four Years -- Newsweek
Aid Groups Accuse UN Of Failing Syrians As Conflict Enters Fifth Year -- IBTimes
Report sheds light on catastrophic poverty in Syria -- YNet News
Isis, carnage and 3.5m refugees: a day devoted to Syria's four-year war -- The Guardian
Aid groups give UN 'failing grade' on Syria -- Al Jazeera
Syria crisis: UN Security Council 'failing victims' -- BBC

2 comments:

Jay Farquharson said...

WNU Editor,

It took almost 3 years for Syria to quell the Muslim Brotherhood Revolt, and cost over 25,000 lives,

And the Muslim Brotherhood at the time, had no training or foreign sponsors.

This go round, the Muslim Brotherhood had over 6 years of foreign training, tons of arms and tens of millions of dollars in sponsorship, before the first shot was ever fired.

War News Updates Editor said...

You are right Jay. I forgot about the last time this happened.