<p>Eight children under five years of age have died within days in a northeastern Syrian camp hosting thousands of relatives of jihadists, Save the Children, a charity said on Thursday.</p>.<p>Health and nutrition services have deteriorated rapidly in the Kurdish-run Al-Hol camp, where the children died over a five-day period, it said.</p>.<p>"The spike in under-five mortality was recorded between 6th to 10th August and is more than three times higher than the mortality rate since the beginning of 2020," a statement said.</p>.<p>The Al-Hol camp is home to tens of thousands of people, including the relatives of Islamic State group jihadists.</p>.<p>It is run by the autonomous Kurdish administration that holds most of northeastern Syria and has reported 171 Covid-19 cases, including 8 deaths in areas under its control. </p>.<p>Medical assistance to Al-Hol has decreased since the UN Security Council in January scrapped a key border crossing that was used to deliver UN-funded medical aid to camp residents.</p>.<p>"We are seeing a collective failure at all levels to protect children," said Save the Children's Syria Response Director Sonia Khush. </p>.<p>"This is the result of ongoing failure of the UN Security Council to reopen the closest border-crossing, leading to unforgivable delays in services."</p>.<p>The charity said the deaths of the eight children in August were linked to heart failure, internal bleeding and severe malnutrition - all of which could be treated in operational field hospitals. </p>.<p>It said border crossing restrictions had reduced the capacity of operational health facilities in Al-Hol by 40 percent.</p>.<p>The crisis has been compounded by the coronavirus pandemic in the overcrowded camp and has sparked fears among aid groups of a health catastrophe. </p>.<p>The United Nations on August 6 said that three health workers in Al-Hol had tested positive for coronavirus. </p>.<p>Two days later, Save the Children said it recorded the first case among camp residents, warning the disease would spread amid reduced medical access.</p>.<p>On Thursday the UN's Humanitarian Coordinator for Syria, Imran Riza, also expressed alarm over the child deaths.</p>.<p>"It underscores the basic fact that no child should be forced to live under the challenging and potentially dangerous humanitarian conditions at Al Hol camp," he said in a statement. </p>
<p>Eight children under five years of age have died within days in a northeastern Syrian camp hosting thousands of relatives of jihadists, Save the Children, a charity said on Thursday.</p>.<p>Health and nutrition services have deteriorated rapidly in the Kurdish-run Al-Hol camp, where the children died over a five-day period, it said.</p>.<p>"The spike in under-five mortality was recorded between 6th to 10th August and is more than three times higher than the mortality rate since the beginning of 2020," a statement said.</p>.<p>The Al-Hol camp is home to tens of thousands of people, including the relatives of Islamic State group jihadists.</p>.<p>It is run by the autonomous Kurdish administration that holds most of northeastern Syria and has reported 171 Covid-19 cases, including 8 deaths in areas under its control. </p>.<p>Medical assistance to Al-Hol has decreased since the UN Security Council in January scrapped a key border crossing that was used to deliver UN-funded medical aid to camp residents.</p>.<p>"We are seeing a collective failure at all levels to protect children," said Save the Children's Syria Response Director Sonia Khush. </p>.<p>"This is the result of ongoing failure of the UN Security Council to reopen the closest border-crossing, leading to unforgivable delays in services."</p>.<p>The charity said the deaths of the eight children in August were linked to heart failure, internal bleeding and severe malnutrition - all of which could be treated in operational field hospitals. </p>.<p>It said border crossing restrictions had reduced the capacity of operational health facilities in Al-Hol by 40 percent.</p>.<p>The crisis has been compounded by the coronavirus pandemic in the overcrowded camp and has sparked fears among aid groups of a health catastrophe. </p>.<p>The United Nations on August 6 said that three health workers in Al-Hol had tested positive for coronavirus. </p>.<p>Two days later, Save the Children said it recorded the first case among camp residents, warning the disease would spread amid reduced medical access.</p>.<p>On Thursday the UN's Humanitarian Coordinator for Syria, Imran Riza, also expressed alarm over the child deaths.</p>.<p>"It underscores the basic fact that no child should be forced to live under the challenging and potentially dangerous humanitarian conditions at Al Hol camp," he said in a statement. </p>