The UN's refugee agency says that land mines pose a threat to children who have been going out to collect grass to eat in the besieged Syrian town of Madaya.
Humanitarian groups are negotiating with all sides for the evacuation of 400 people, many starving, from the besieged Syrian town of Madaya, the Red Cross has said.
The United Nations, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), and the Syrian Arab Red Crescent are now working to evacuate around 400 people in need of urgent care, said ICRC spokesman Pawel Krzysiek.
"It's a very complicated process that needs permission to realize this humanitarian operation. We are in negotiations with all parties," Krzysiek told AFP.
The World Food Program (WFP) has tweeted these statistics about the aid that reached the besieged Syrian town of Madaya yesterday.
Turkey's Daily Sabah has more details on Turkish President Erdogan's comments regarding this morning's blast in Istanbul that killed 10 people.
Erdogan told ambassadors at the Presidential Palace in Ankara that the blast was caused by a Syrian suicide bomber.
"This incident once again has shown us that we have to stay united against terrorism," Erdogan said
In an attempt to curb the numbers of British women traveling to Syria to join the IS group, police in the UK have released a video of female Syrian refugees asking why any woman would choose to take her family to a war zone.
Some 56 women and girls are thought to have traveled to Syria from the UK in 2015 and police have expressed concern over the phenomenon.
The video was released in association with the UK NGO Families Against Stress and Trauma.
One of the refugees appearing in the video, Fatten, says that her family "were living under very bad circumstances and it was getting worse every day."
This morning's bomb blast in Istanbul was carried out by a 28-year-old Syrian suicide bomber, Turkey's deputy prime minister has said.
Elizabeth Hoff, the World Health Representative in Damascus who went to the besieged town of Madaya yesterday with an aid convoy, told Reuters by telephone today that she is "really alarmed" about the situation there.
Hoff said:
"People gathered in the market place. You could see many were malnourished, starving. They were skinny, tired, severely distressed. There was no smile on anybody's face. It is not what you see when you arrive with a convoy. The children I talked to said they had no strength to play."