Heavy: As a result of the war, millions of Syrian children are traumatized and show strange behavior (Photo)

The boy did not want to look back, so he held his mother's hand tight and tried to close his eyes. The boy who is already 11, and is a refugee in Beirut, says he has seen ten beheadings, a man throwing it off the top of a building after these [...]
The boy, who is already 11 years old and a refugee in Beirut, says he has seen ten beheadings, a man throwing it off the top of a building, after these horror images, Islamic militants showed the children videos of human executions. All these videos were looked inside the glass, says the boy.
The Syrian civil war brutality caused by the Islamic State has been witnessed by many children who have been part of this terrible event. Schools have been closed for years. Young boys have been recruited to fight, reports “York Times”, Transmission Periscope.
Now when the military forces are fighting the militants in the Islamic state and part of them are starting to leave, children leaving violence must avoid air strikes, snipers, when they make their way through the desert.
The danger of children also increases when security reaches. Police officers who have already released many territories recruit children to fight, according to UN officials and employees.
Yet, it is undeniable that millions of young people in Syria have grown up amid trauma.
A pediatricist, considering the health of young children who had recently fled to Raqqa, the town where the Islamic State has its Syrian headquarters, was disturbed by the way they had strange behavior.
The conditions for survival are also miserable. There's not enough water to drink.
Mahmoud, a resident of Raqqa, who left a year ago, said his friends told him that the food was so small that even the little food they had given to their children, and when the time of food came they were chewing with the pretexi that they too are eating food to deceive their children.
Over 200,000 people reportedly left the city between April and July, according to the United Nations./Periscopi/













