By DR GRAHAM THOM
As a father myself, there’s something particularly haunting about seeing kids trying to play in a desert, made up of rocks and dust, devoid of anything you’d relate to a normal childhood.
Zaatari refugee camp in Jordan is 12 kilometres away from the border with Syria and a place I recently visited as part of my role as Refugee Coordinator at Amnesty International.
This camp is temporary ‘home’ to more than 85,000 people. Over 17,000 of them are children under the age of five.
These kids are highly traumatised by the armed conflicts they’ve fled and often sit quietly alongside their parents as they recount stories of beatings, kidnaps, rape and murder.
One couple I met had three young children that sat and watched nearby as they told me how the husband’s sister had been brutally murdered. They explained how not long after, while the family was at home, militants invaded. The husband was assaulted in front of his family, he had bones broken, including his shoulder. His wife, who had only given birth a few months before, to the couple’s youngest child, was brutally kicked in the stomach.
Their two young boys, both aged under five, were also beaten. One of the boys had his tooth smashed and the other was hit in the forehead with the butt of a rifle, leaving him with a large scar. The militants stole anything of value and smashed everything else, telling the family “You have to leave”.
Later that day, I watched as these kids played with other children from the camp in trenches that had been dug as an extra security measure, around the perimeter of the camp. For the kids, this wasn’t a reminder of the precarious situation they were in: it was just another thing they could climb and play in and have fun.
These are the kids that Australia can and should do more for. They are the innocent survivors of civil war in Syria and Iraq, hoping trauma is a memory left behind in the ruins of their homes.