their school sandwiches and therms flasks i lock the door and go and wait in the first queue if i know any of the police offices they let me through a year. a marathon there it s mathematics when i arrive in militia i have to wait in a queue with the women normally we each carry one bale but if the galley has a view a nice i m allowed to carry two women one on my back and the other on a skateboard we are paid on delivering provided nothing was stolen and everything is intact then i get twenty euros. romani yen works for the army a severe police and border patrol force and molina. here at the interface between africa and europe the fences are getting higher and higher but they cannot stop the informal. trade romandie and monitors the goods traffic on
the situation is dire as those traps there waiting desperately for food and medicine. and many families like those in our next report are living as internal refugees and fear that they will have to move on again they abandoned aleppo in two thousand and sixteen and are now living in it live one of the last rebel stronghold in syria. musser is fifteen years old and he s already supporting a family of six his father was killed in an airstrike now fouad sells vegetables and it lives earning twenty euros a month that leaves no time to go to school. i have to provide for the whole family a road from morning to night to make ends meet. warplanes are approaching again. is used to the sound of sirens.