Besieged Madaya, Syria, Residents Describe Starvation, 'Heartbreaking' Conditions

One person claims a woman ate a cat that she thought was rabbit meat.

LONDON— -- Several residents of the besieged Syrian town of Madaya have been able to leave one day after aid convoys were allowed in amid reports of widespread starvation.

“We are suffering from anemia and many other diseases,” an unnamed resident who managed to leave Madaya told BBC News, before adding: “We have no food, even bread. There’s no water, no electricity, no heating, our children cry all night, we are unable to feed them.”

It is unclear how many people have left Madaya in the past 24 hours.

WHO representative Elizabeth Hoff said a door-to-door assessment was needed. So far, 7.8 tons of medical aid, including trauma kits for wounds and medications for treating chronic and communicable diseases, have been delivered, Hoff said.

The multiagency aid convoys were able to enter the city of Madaya, where about 40,000 people live, only after an agreement was made with the government to also deliver aid to the rebel-held cities of Foua and Kefraya.

On Monday, aid workers described seeing crowds of hungry children: "It's heartbreaking to see so many hungry people," Sajjad Malik, a representative for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in Syria, said.

“I know someone who caught cats, slaughtered them and gave them to his mother, pretending they were rabbits. I know other people who collected their food from the trash and others who ate grass,” one resident who was not named told BBC News.

"The aid convoy to Madaya has been delivered using 44 trucks and contained 7,800 food parcels, enough for 40,000 people, babies food, pregnant women special nutrition, high energy food, medical supplies, various medicines and 20,000 blankets," the Syrian Arab Red Crescent Society said a written statement.

"The aid convoy to Kefraya and Foua has been delivered using 21 trucks and contained 4,000 food parcels enough for 20,000 people, babies food, pregnant women special nutrition, high energy food, medical supplies, various medicines and 10,000 blankets," the ICRC added.

Up to 400,000 people in 15 besieged locations of Syria do not have access to the aid they desperately need, according to the United Nations, and in the past year, only 10 percent of all requests to access these areas were approved, followed by deliveries.