The suffering of thousands of displaced Syrians and refugees continues at home and abroad, especially with poor weather conditions in winter.

Continuous rainfall and record temperatures have made living conditions in the camps almost impossible.

With the lack of fuel, and the difficulty of obtaining it in these weather conditions, hundreds of families in the camps in the Syrian province of Idlib have to set fire to their purposes in search of a sense of warmth, instead of dying from the cold.

Umm Khalaf, the 10-year-old, says she feels overwhelmed every day when she finds nothing to set fire to.

"We have not been given winter clothes, and now we have to set fire to clothes, shoes and plastic items to feel warm," Anatolia said.

"It's not just fuel, the camp is sinking in the mud because of the rains, we have nothing to eat or drink, and we can not go out to find what we need in these circumstances," said Um Yassin, a refugee camp refugee.

Abboud Abu Basem pointed out that lighting them in the tires of cars and plastic items affects the health of camp residents, especially children.

Subhi Wahda also said that they had to go to the mud for a distance of one kilometer to get bread, but in the end even the animals resumed eating this mud-stained bread, as he put it.

While Amani said she was chilling with her seven brothers because of the cold at the immortality to sleep every night in their tent.

UNICEF said 15 Syrian children had died in camps in Syria as a result of the cold and lack of medical assistance. UNICEF called on all parties to allow immediate and immediate access to medical and humanitarian assistance to the camp.

A Syrian displaced woman also burned her life in the Al-Rikban camp on the Syrian side of the border with Jordan because of the suffering of her three children and the severe poverty suffered by her family, where food has not been cooked for 15 days.