This op-ed by Bujar Hoxha, Save the Children Syria Country Director, highlights the urgent humanitarian crisis facing Syria’s children amid political change. With millions affected by hunger, displacement, and aid cuts, he urges prioritizing children’s safety, education, and wellbeing to secure Syria’s future.
About six months into Syria’s political transition, change is in the motion. Syria is shifting. But the needs facing children remain enormous and addressing them must be central to any vision for Syria’s future. A lot has changed, but we cannot rebuild without investing in the next generation.
I’ve worked in humanitarian emergencies for over 26 years, including more than a decade on the Syria response. But only in the last six months, with access across the country, have I seen the full picture of what childhood has become here. It is shaped not only by violence, but by hunger, displacement, and neglect. And unless we act now, it will also be shaped by the world’s failure to invest in children’s futures
In Damascus, life feels frozen in time. Crumbling infrastructure and rolling blackouts. Children line the streets selling tissues as the economic collapse means families are unable to afford food, school fees, or healthcare.
RECENT CUTS TO FOREIGN AID ARE PUTTING MILLIONS OF CHILDREN IN LIFE-THREATENING SITUATIONS. your support is needed more than ever.
Just minutes outside the capital, the destruction is apocalyptic with ruined buildings and rubble stretching as far as the eye can see. These are the same images that became synonymous with Syria during the war. What the footage didn’t show are the families still camped outside their destroyed homes, more than 10 years later, without running water or electricity.
I understand what it means to live through conflict. I was a child refugee during the war in Kosovo, forced from my home, deported by train, and held behind fences with thousands of others. I worked on the streets selling cigarettes to support my family. I know child labour not as a statistic, but as survival. But I also know the difference humanitarian support can make. When aid workers reached us, they helped restore our dignity and our future.
Over 16 million people in Syria, including more than 7.5 million children - nearly one third of the population - need humanitarian aid, the highest number recorded since the war began. Over 2.4 million children are out of school, according to the UN. Hunger is worsening, with an estimated 650,000 children under five chronically malnourished, according to nutrition data. In the past year alone, more than 180 children have been killed or injured by landmines and explosive remnants of war.
Hamza*, 10 months, got malnutrition at the age of four months old. Hamza* now is receiving peanut paste and other treatments and has started to improve. Bara Khattab / Save the Children
These dangers are compounded by another threat: the international community’s failure to prioritise children’s needs. Just as needs reach record highs, funding is drying up. Across Syria, hospitals have shut, nutrition centres have closed, and vital child protection services are being cut as donors reduce global aid. In one of our maternity and paediatric hospitals in northwest Syria, where nearby facilities have shut down, the number of children needing care has tripled in a matter of months, placing immense pressure on already overstretched services.
Foreign aid cuts are also hitting the camps of Al Hol and Roj in Northeast Syria. These two sites hold about 40,000 people, mostly women and children. Nearly two-thirds of those in the camps are under 18, and many rely entirely on humanitarian agencies for food, education, and protection. With services now under threat, children risk losing the little stability they have.
If they close the school, I will be deprived of my right to education,” 14-year-old Safiya told us.
These are not places for children to grow up. I met Amina, 19, and Zahra, 12, two sisters from Bosnia who have spent most of their childhoods in the camps. Their friends have been repatriated, but they are still waiting, confused. Foreign governments must take urgent action to bring children like them, their citizens, home. For Syrian families, new opportunities are opening to leave the camps and return to their towns and villages, but this must be done safely, voluntarily, and with sustained support.
There is still time to act. Syria’s future will not be written solely in political agreements or reconstruction plans. If we want peace to last, we must invest in children now. That means restoring education, ensuring they are safe from hunger and harm, and supporting families to rebuild their lives with dignity.
This is a pivotal moment. For the first time in years, there is movement, possibility. But momentum alone is not enough, especially not for a child living in a tent, out of school, or suffering from malnutrition, Syria is changing. Let’s make sure that change starts with its children.