Iman Ahmad Laila, a Syrian child of a family who was displaced by Bashar al-Assad's regime from Eastern Ghouta in Damascus two years ago, was born during the displacement trips of the family, who moved from one town to another in northern Syria, to escape the bombing of the regime's planes and its allies.

Iman-Khamis arrived at Al-Shifa Hospital in the city of Afrin, north of the country, and her father carried her from the camp of Marata near the city, which the family had taken refuge after it was forced to escape the bombing of the Assad regime and its allies on the city of Saraqib in the southern Idlib countryside.

After doctors examined Iman in the hospital, they found her dead more than an hour ago, as a result of a severe cold, because of the lack of heating in the camp where you live, with unprecedented temperatures.

Iman left the world with her eyes open, and she was blue in color from the severity of the cold, and before she had a cold, she was suffering from severe cerebral and muscular atrophy and malnutrition, according to hospital sources.

Since the spread of its images, social media has rushed to talk about the tragedy of Iman and its fellow Syrian children who have lost their lives and their future, due to the violence of the Syrian regime and its allies who have been relentlessly bombing and displacing civilians since the beginning of the Syrian revolution nine years ago.

The doctor, who was briefed on Iman’s condition, reported that she had come to the hospital by a deceased woman, pointing out that the direct cause of her death was a severe cold, or the so-called “frostbite” that led to a heart and breathing stoppage, in addition to the expansion of her pupils and the color of her face turning blue.

The doctor told Anatolia that Eman used to live with her family in a house that does not have windows and does not have heating, so her body could not tolerate the sickness of the patient who is very cold, and she died.

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On the humanitarian front, the Syrian Response Coordinators said that it recorded nine deaths in camps for the displaced in rural Idlib and Aleppo in northern Syria, some due to the cold and others due to burns and asphyxia resulting from the use of unsafe heating methods to overcome the cold.

For its part, the Syrian Network for Human Rights said that 167 Syrians died from the cold in the period from March 2011 to last January.

On Thursday, UN spokesman David Swanson said that more than 800,000 Syrians - most of them women and children - had fled their homes due to a Syrian military campaign backed by Russia in northwestern Syria since last December.

Reuters quoted him as saying that the wave of mass exodus is expected to continue with the movement of thousands, with residents of entire cities and towns leaving for safety in areas near the Turkish border.

"It is heartbreaking that the number of displaced - mostly women and children - has exceeded 800,000," Swanson said, and UN officials say the region is on the brink of a humanitarian catastrophe.

Aid agencies staff said that families and families who fled the air strikes and the advance of the Syrian forces in Idlib Governorate sleep in the open, in the streets, and in the olive groves, and have to burn toxic piles of garbage in order to seek warmth during the harsh winter nights.