As Syria’s children step out of the shadows of war, securing their future is more critical than ever – UNICEF

More than 75 per cent of the country’s 10.5 million children were born into war

25 March 2025
Neveen is an extraordinary 10-year-old girl. Her family originally hailed from Kobani, Syria. Neveen, the elder sibling, shares love and support with her younger sister, Nourshin, and her brother, Ali.
UNICEF/UNI513813/Jalal Neveen is an extraordinary 10-year-old girl. Her family originally hailed from Kobani, Syria. Neveen, the elder sibling, shares love and support with her younger sister, Nourshin, and her brother, Ali.

NEW YORK/DAMASCUS, 25 March 2025 – As families in Syria adjust to a new era in the country’s history following 14 years of brutal conflict, UNICEF calls for urgent support to ensure children have a safe and prosperous path ahead.

More than 75 per cent of Syria's 10.5 million children are estimated to have been born during the 14-year civil war, with their entire childhood set against a backdrop of displacement, violence, and devastation.

“Years of war and violence have shattered the lives of Syria’s children, with many enduring a lifetime of hardship,” said UNICEF Executive Director, Catherine Russell. “We need to work urgently to ensure that every child in the country, wherever they are, can reclaim a childhood, access to learning, and a life free from violence and fear.”

A recent surge in violence around Syria’s coastal areas this month reportedly claimed the lives of at least 13 children, including a six-month-old baby, while causing additional civilian casualties and injuries. Thousands of families were displaced during the attacks, and critical infrastructure was damaged.

The overall humanitarian situation remains dire for children across Syria, with nine in ten people living below the poverty line and many families forced to resort to desperate measures to cope, including child labour, and early marriage for young girls.

In addition:

  • At least 5 million children remain at risk from explosive remnants of war, with nearly 300,000 deadly devices scattered across the country.
  • More than 40 per cent of the nearly 20,000 schools in the country remain closed, leaving over 2.4 million children out of classrooms and over one million at risk of dropping out.   
  • More than 500,000 children under five are suffering from life-threatening malnutrition, while 2 million more on the verge of becoming malnourished.
  • Operational capacity to provide clean water across the country’s 14 Governorates is below 50 per cent, dropping to 23 per cent at times when no electricity is available. Meanwhile, 70 per cent of all sewage is dumped untreated into the environment, creating a hazardous combination for children.

As world leaders gathered in Brussels last week for the Standing with Syria Conference, UNICEF called for a child-focused approach to Syria’s recovery and reconstruction. The rights and well-being of children must be central to political, social, and economic rebuilding efforts. This includes:

  • Immediate protection of children and essential services, including schools, hospitals and water infrastructure.
  • Investment in education, ensuring that every child has access to safe, inclusive and quality learning.
  • Wider humanitarian access to deliver lifesaving support to children in need.
  • Sustained international support towards an inclusive recovery and rebuilding of essential systems - from healthcare to water and sanitation – to stabilize the fragile situation. 

“This is a moment of hope and of great responsibility,” said Russell. “Now is the time to act decisively to rebuild, protect, and invest in the future of every child, in every community across the country.”

UNICEF remains committed to working with partners to support systematic reform, institutional development, and   scalable and sustainable social services towards recovery and reconstruction.  Simultaneously, delivering urgent humanitarian assistance to ensure that no child is left behind. 

Media contacts

Ricardo Pires
Communication Manager
UNICEF New York
Tel: +1 9176311226
Ammar Ammar
UNICEF Amman
Tel: +962 791 837 388

Additional resources

3-year-old Kawthar wears her new woollen hat and scarf, received as part of the winter clothing kits UNICEF distributed in Alzhourieyh makeshift camp, east rural Homs.
On 22 January 2022, 3-year-old Kawthar wears her new woollen hat and scarf, received as part of the winter clothing kits UNICEF distributed in Alzhourieyh makeshift camp, east rural Homs. “These came just in time,” says her mother Turkiyeh, 39, about the winter clothes. Kawthar’s family is among a few hundred that left Rukban remote desert camp by the Syria Jordanian border in 2019, where they had sought refuge from violence escalations back in their hometowns. Hoping to return to their places of origin, they have sheltered in tents Alzhouriyeh, east rural Homs, under the most basic conditions. To help children keep warm this winter, with thanks to a generous contribution from Luxembourg , UNICEF is reaching more than 3,200 of them, aged 0 – 14 years, in camp settings and collective shelters in Homs governorate, through the distribution of winter clothing kits. Each clothing kit contains a winter jacket, a woolen sweater, a thermal outfit, warm winter trousers, a woolen hat, a scarf, gloves, socks, winter boots and warm pajamas. Baby kits also include body suits, a cotton set of gloves, a hat and socks, baby blankets, a baby coat, a carrying bag and hygiene supplies for babies.

About UNICEF

UNICEF, the United Nations agency for children, works to protect the rights of every child, everywhere, especially the most disadvantaged children and in the toughest places to reach. Across more than 190 countries and territories, we do whatever it takes to help children survive, thrive, and fulfil their potential.

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