Syrian refugee children are becoming the family breadwinners

According to a new UN report, nearly one in two Syrian refugee families living outside a camp rely entirely or partly on income generated by a child.

November 29, 2013

A growing number of Syrian refugee children in Lebanon and Jordan are fast becoming primary providers for families who lack resources for basic survival, the United Nations refugee agency said in a report Friday.

With the Syrian conflict in its third year, the 61-page report by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees highlights the plight of the children, who are growing up in fractured families, missing out on education and increasingly going out to work to help support extended families in exile.

More than two million Syrians fled their homes because of the country's raging conflict, seeking shelter in neighboring countries such as Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey and Iraq. At least half of the refugees — 1.1 million — are children. Of those, some 75 percent are under the age of 12, the UNHCR report said.

Why many in Ukraine oppose a ‘land for peace’ formula to end the war

Children as young as seven work long hours of manual labor in fields, farms and shops for little pay, sometimes under dangerous or exploitative conditions, the report added.

In Jordan's sprawling Zaatari refugee camp, most of the 680 small shops employ children, the report also said. A UNHCR assessment of refugee children living outside of the camp found that in 11 of the country's 12 provinces, nearly every second refugee household surveyed relied partly or entirely on income generated by a child.

In Lebanon, hundreds of refugee children — many of them girls aged seven to 12 — are picked up daily at dozens of informal refugee settlements dotting the Bekaa Valley and border areas in the north, loaded onto trucks and taken to the fields where they work for six to eight hours and earn up to 6,000 Lebanese pounds per day.

Many Syrian refugee children in Lebanon also fall into the hands of criminal gangs specialized in exploiting the most vulnerable victims of the conflict. They are seen begging on the streets of Beirut or more frequently selling flowers and gum for their often abusive patrons.

Lack of access to formal education is a persisting problem among refugee children, the UNHCR said, with their research showing that more Syrian refugee children are now out of school than enrolled in a formal education system.

Howard University hoped to make history. Now it’s ready for a different role.

In Jordan, more than half of all school-aged Syrian children are not in school. In Lebanon, some 200,000 school-aged Syrian refugee children may remain out of school at the end of the year because local schools have run out of classroom space.

"It's another tragic consequence of the crisis, young Syrian refugee children who should be in school are instead out working in the fields from early morning until late afternoon for a pittance," said Sonia Zambakides, the Director for Save the Children for Lebanon. The Britain-based charity is giving the most vulnerable families cash donations throughout winter as part of program that provides parents with an alternative to sending their children out to work.

The charity also supports thousands of children in various learning programs and back-to-school campaigns in Lebanon so that thousands of children — many of whom have been out of school for more than two years — will be able to continue their education.

Another disturbing symptom of the crisis is the vast number of babies born in exile who do not have birth certificates, the UNHCR said. The agency's recent survey on birth registration in Lebanon showed that that 77 per cent of 781 refugee infants sampled did not have an official birth certificate.

Between January and mid-October 2013, only 68 certificates were issued to babies born in Zaatari camp, Jordan, the report said.