"Dying In Slow Motion": Videos Show Horror Of Syrian Town's Starvation
The Syrian town of Madaya, caught in the crosshairs of civil war, has not received food supplies since October.
Disturbing new evidence of the barbarity of Syria's civil war, now nearly five years old, has emerged on social media.
Not far from the capital, the town of Madaya is being starved by the dictator's forces. Men, women and children are "dying in slow motion," as one resident put it. Months of deprivation have pushed the smallest and the poorest to the very brink.
A mother feeds her child what looks like broth, but is actually water flavored with jam.
In an online appeal, a man explains "we have no food, no water and no power," then bursts into tears. "Please world," he begs. "We are dying."
Activists say the most wretched are making soup with grass, and some have already died of starvation.
This is all happening just 30 miles from Damascus, Syria's capital, in an area that used to be fertile with farms and orchards.
CBS News traveled to Madaya in 2012 when it was still safe enough to visit the rebels who control the area. Now the rebels and more than 40,000 residents are trapped, surrounded by Syrian government forces who have sealed off all the roads.
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/activist-videos-show-horror-of-syrian-towns-starvation/
Disturbing new evidence of the barbarity of Syria's civil war, now nearly five years old, has emerged on social media.
Not far from the capital, the town of Madaya is being starved by the dictator's forces. Men, women and children are "dying in slow motion," as one resident put it. Months of deprivation have pushed the smallest and the poorest to the very brink.
A mother feeds her child what looks like broth, but is actually water flavored with jam.
In an online appeal, a man explains "we have no food, no water and no power," then bursts into tears. "Please world," he begs. "We are dying."
Activists say the most wretched are making soup with grass, and some have already died of starvation.
This is all happening just 30 miles from Damascus, Syria's capital, in an area that used to be fertile with farms and orchards.
CBS News traveled to Madaya in 2012 when it was still safe enough to visit the rebels who control the area. Now the rebels and more than 40,000 residents are trapped, surrounded by Syrian government forces who have sealed off all the roads.
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/activist-videos-show-horror-of-syrian-towns-starvation/