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Thousands Struggle As Fighting Forces People From Their Homes in Northwest Syria

Beirut, Lebanon

Thousands that have fled their homes to escape airstrikes and fighting in Idlib are now living in dire conditions, warns the International Rescue Committee (IRC). Around 100,000 people have fled northern Hama province and southern Idlib in recent weeks and some of the most recent arrivals have walked up to seven hours to reach safety, bringing with them only what they could carry.

The IRC is responding in central Idlib and helping hundreds of the new arrivals by providing healthcare and cash so families can pay for food and other essentials. In some locations more than two thirds are now living in make-shift tents, in sites lacking toilets. Up to three families at a time are living together in these tents, which are unable to withstand the elements, while others are living in unfinished or abandoned buildings.

Idlib has been designated a so-called 'de-escalation' zone and covered by ceasefire agreements and nearly half the population are people who escaped the war in other parts of Syria. Civilians in Idlib have also been suffering as a consequence of fighting between armed groups, which have on several occasions disrupted aid deliveries. Despite violence increasing across Syria in 2017, nearly 7,000 Syrians living in the US under temporary protected status since 2012, risk having their legal stay come to an end as the program is at risk of termination.

"We are extremely concerned for the safety of the 2.6 million people living in Idlib if the frontline continues to advance," said Thomas Garofalo, the IRC's Middle East Director for Public Affairs. "People have told us that they will have no choice but to uproot themselves once again and head further north. They will be heading to displacement camps that are already far beyond capacity which means their situation will get even worse, in the dead of a wet, cold winter."

The IRC has heard from families of the panic as they fled. "We couldn't think right -- the fear affected our brains," said the mother of two young children who, panicked by air strikes, initially left one of them behind. Fortunately, she found the child unharmed when she returned.

Those fleeing the fighting travel during the day to avoid car-jackers. Several people traveling on foot injured themselves slipping on mud, resorting to improvised casts created with egg-soaked rags.

The IRC provides healthcare, cash and other vital support in Idlib, and in 2016 reached nearly 400,000 people with aid in the province.

For more information or arrange interviews please contact: Paul Donohoe, International Rescue Committee's Senior Media Officer, Beirut, on paul.donohoe@rescue.org or +961 81 757 175.

The International Rescue Committee responds to the world's worst humanitarian crises and helps people whose lives and livelihoods are shattered by conflict and disaster to survive, recover, and gain control of their future.