Prince Charles and Camilla with Syrian refugees in Jordan (Photos from The Daily Mail) |
Samantha Cameron with Syrian refugees in Lebanon (Photos from The Daily Mail) |
Samantha
Cameron, the British Prime Minister’s wife and a mother of three, travelled to
Lebanon on Tuesday for a barefoot visit to a Syrian
refugee camp as an ambassador for Save the Children.
Two weeks before, the
Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall visited a Syrian
refugee camp in Jordan. Prince Charles has since made significant donations to the British Red Cross Syria Crisis and
the Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC) appeals.
The Daily Mail gave
extensive coverage to both visits.
Covering
Mrs. Cameron’s first
solo foreign trip, Max
Hastings wrote in part:
Barefoot and sitting
cross-legged on the floor, Samantha Cameron is listening to mothers telling
stories about their children.
But in this mothers’
group, the tales are of grief, fear and terrible loss. They are some of the most
shocking stories she has ever heard…
After visiting refugees,
the woman who rarely makes public pronouncements warned that innocent
childhoods were “being smashed to pieces” in the conflict.
Mrs. Cameron said,
“As a mother, it is horrifying to hear the harrowing stories from the children
I met today. No child should ever experience what they have.
“With every day that passes, more children and parents are being killed,
more innocent childhoods are being smashed to pieces.”
Mrs. Cameron, who has been
an ambassador for Save the Children since 2011, visited a camp in the Bekaa
Valley on Tuesday and spoke to women and children caught up in the violence.
Visibly emotional after
speaking to a mother whose young son was killed by a sniper in front of her
other six children, she said, ‘It’s so shocking. It’s difficult to take in.
“Her three-year-old son
was shot by a sniper at a checkpoint – a sniper aiming at a car full of seven
children. I mean, it’s just … you just can’t imagine why that could happen.”
The grieving mother had
told Mrs. Cameron, “I was driving with my children, trying to escape Syria,
when the shooting started. How can anyone shoot at a car with seven children in
it?
“They shot my baby and he
died. His brothers and sisters saw this happen.”
At a health clinic at the
camp, Mrs. Cameron held the hand of a little disabled boy. Because of constant
shelling and sniper fire, his mother struggles to find healthcare for him.
An estimated three million
people have fled their homes in Syria. One million have made it to neighboring
countries but two million are trapped in the warzone.
Save The Children chief
executive Justin Forsyth, who accompanied Mrs. Cameron, said, “Samantha
Cameron’s support helps draw attention to the plight of children caught up in
this terrifying conflict. Without more help, and quickly, we risk losing a
generation of Syria’s children.”
Covering Prince Charles and Camilla’s earlier
visit to the King Abdullah Park refugee camp in Jordan, The Daily Mail’s royal correspondent Rebecca
English wrote in part:
As
they picked their way through the dust and rubble, the shock on their faces was
evident.
Prince
Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall (March 13) visited a refugee camp in Jordan
for men, women and children fleeing the brutalities of civil war in Syria.
Just
seven miles south of the border at Ramtha, King Abdullah Park is home to almost
a thousand desperate and displaced, more than half of which are children.
As
he met one man who had twice been imprisoned and tortured for writing
anti-government poetry, grim-faced Charles asked: 'Do you see any end to this
horror?'
The Prince and the Duchess
first stopped at a Portacabin where half a dozen women were knitting and making
handicrafts, which will be sold to raise funds for the refugees.
Despite not having a
common language, Camilla immediately bonded with the ladies as she gave them a
thumb up, prompting them to laugh and smile.
'Have you always knitted?'
she asked through a translator.
One woman told her that
she had been in the camp with her children for seven months, another for a year
and a half.
The Duchess listened
intently and admired their handicrafts.
Afterwards she told the Mail,
“Some of their stories are so harrowing but what I find so remarkable is their
strength of spirit and the way they are so cheerful despite their
circumstances.
“I think that is women for
you. They have got their children to look after. They have to survive.
“But to think that many of
them don't even know whether their husbands are alive or dead... it is just
awful.”
The couple was then
introduced to Na’eem, 55, who fled his home in Della with his wife and five
children aged between 22 and six last July.
Na’eem told the prince how
he was twice imprisoned and tortured by Syrian forces -- once for two and a
half months -- for writing anti-government poetry. He had cigarettes and cigars
stubbed out on his body, the scars of which were still visible.
“When they arrested me
there were rapes and all sorts of abuse in the jails,” he said. “They tied me
up and blindfolded me and doing things to my body.”
…The couple also spent
time in a children's area where youngsters are encouraged to deal with the
trauma of what they have seen by drawing. Many of the childish scribbles
horrifically depict guns and dead bodies.
One, 12-year-old Emira, whose
name means Princess, said: “My father is in prison but sometimes my mother says
he is dead. I don't know whether I will see him again.”
Her words clearly moved the
prince, who said afterwards: “Many of these children have been traumatized by
the terrors they have witnessed before they came here.
“Some of them have lost
their parents and had horrendous experiences and it is remarkable what all
these wonderful NGOS are doing to deal with this unbelievably heartbreaking
situation.
“I think the thing that
has come out of this is just how unbelievable generous the Jordanian people
are, who are truly remarkable.
“The generosity is
extraordinary but it's putting more and more strain on food and hospitals, so
clearly the Jordanians need more assistance and help to be able to cope with
this immense challenge.”
Camilla added, “Seeing all
those children some of whom will have lost their parents and been adopted by
others, I feel it is quite heartbreaking.”
…Sava Mobaslat, 41, the
program director for Save the Children in Jordan, said the 600 children at the
camp are bussed to local schools to continue their education but go to the
children’s center every day for therapy sessions.
The children are
encouraged to draw what they have seen, because they often do not have the
vocabulary to express their feelings and experiences.
Mobaslat said, “We use
drawing, drama, music and arts as an alternative form of expression through
which they can express their anxiety and frustration to help them get over it.
“They draw guns, bodies, a
lot of red to begin with and gradually they go back to drawing the garden in
their backyard.
“The timeframe for their
recovery varies from child to child, it takes longer for someone who has
witnessed the death of a parent or sibling. We have one girl who was walking to
school and saw it bombed with her siblings inside and it took her a long time
to get over that image.
“Today they are drawing
nice images from home, something from their past they can link to their future.
“They understand that it’s
only education that can help them go home and rebuild what was ruined…”