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As The Situation In Syria Turns From Bad To Worse, Here’s What You Can Do To Help

Following another deadly chemical attack (Warning: distressing content)

The images of what happened in Syria this week are so distressing, we have decided not to show them. Activists and medical workers on the ground are sending reports of a suspected chemical attack – most likely the nerve agent Sarin concealed with chlorine gas – on hundreds of civilians. The government is calling the attack pure fabrication, but the images – of dying children unable to breathe and foaming at the mouth – speak for themselves.

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RELATED: Syrian Children Are Turning to Social Media To Ask The West For Help

The BBC reports that more than 40 people were killed in the April 8 attack in Douma, Eastern Ghouta, with more than 500 patients presenting at medical facilities with symptoms consistent with exposure to a nerve agent.

A spokesperson for British Prime Minister Theresa May, who is in talks with French President Emmanuel Macron and Donald Trump, said the attacks “represented further evidence of the Assad regime’s appalling cruelty against its own people and total disregard for its legal obligations not to use these weapons.”

Multiple organisations are engaged in delivering emergency supplies, medical assistance and humanitarian aid to Syrian people in danger. Scroll to see how you can help.

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Syrian chemical attack children
Bodies of Syrian children after the alleged chemical gas attack in Douma, Syria on April 08, 2018. (Credit: Getty)

RELATED: Horrifying Images Show Child Victims Of ‘Chlorine Gas’ Attack In Syria

UNICEF Syria Crisis Appeal: UNICEF is dedicated to helping the eight million children in need of emergency aid in Syria, delivering emergency supplies, protection and trauma counselling to those living in the country’s most dangerous regions, as well as those fleeing for their lives with their families. $71 could provide eight blankets; $93 can provide 2450 micronutrient sachets to restore a child’s health. Donate here.

The United Nations High Commissioner For Refugees (UNHCR) exists to provide humanitarian aid for refugees. Just $35 will sink a well to provide much-needed drinking water for families in a Syrian refugee camp; $480 will house a family of five in an all-weather tent. Donate here.

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Australian Red Cross is committed to providing care in even the most dangerous parts of the country, from emergency health care to food parcels to safe drinking water and first aid kits. Donate here.

Medicins Sans Frontieres/Doctors Without Borders helps to run field hospitals and clinics across Syria, providing urgent medical care to adults and children caught up in the conflict. According to their website, the war has destroyed Syria’s previously well-functioning healthcare system. Donate here.

syrian refugees 2018
Buses carrying Jaish al-Islam fighters and their families from their former rebel bastion of Douma, arrive at the Abu al-Zindeen checkpoint controlled by Turkish-backed rebel fighters near the northern Syrian town of al-Bab, on April 10, 2018. (Credit: Getty)

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