Family in Homa, the province of North Kiva, DR Congo. The main news of the day | Thursday: Gas, Ukraine, DR Congo, Syria UN The main news of the day at the UN and the world: the UN commented on the ceremony of the transfer of Hamas Tel to the dead hostages to Israel, the Zaporizhzhya nuclear power plant is left without reserve power supply, crimes against children in the DRC, the Syrian economy will be able to recover no earlier than 2080. dead hostages 62 > 62 >The UN commented at the transfer ceremony by the Hamas Tel to the dead hostages to Israel. The UN press secretary Stefan Duzharrick said at a briefing in New York: “We saw how Hamas handed over the bodies of the mother and two children from the Bibas family, as well as the body of an 84-year-old man.” According to Duzharrik, the UN Secretary General condemned the fact that the bodies of the dead hostages were flaunted, and called the incident “outrageous”. According to international law, any transfer of the remains of the dead should correspond to the ban on cruel, inhuman or humiliating dignity, Dyujarrick emphasized. ~ 60 > 60 ~ h2 class = “Text-align-justify” > situation of ZAES Zaporizhzhya Nuclear power plant (ZAES) of Ukraine has been working for more than a week at the expense of one outer power line after the only remaining reserve line has been disabled. This is another reminder of the fragility of nuclear security situations during the military conflict, today said the General Director of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Rafael Mariano Grossy. Nuclear power plants need a reliable external power supply to cool reactors and perform other most important functions, emphasized in the agency. ~ 60 > children in DRK 60 ~ p class = “Text-align-justify” > in the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child warns that against the backdrop of violence in the DR Congo, children become victims of serious crimes, including murders, massive executions, sexual violence, recruitment and abduction. The committee experts expressed concern to the escalation of violence in many villages in Northern and Southern Kiva, where armed groups are increasingly attacking children who were forced to leave their homes and who have no adequate housing. Such children spend most of the time on the street and are constantly exposed to danger. Syrian economy fourteen years of conflict nullified almost four decades of economic and social progress in Syria, the UN Development Program (UNDP) said in a new report. According to forecasts, at the current growth rate of Syria, the economy of Syria will be able to return to the preflict level no earlier than 2080. To reduce the recovery period to ten years, annual growth should increase six times. According to the authors of the report, nine out of ten Syrians currently live in poverty. Since the beginning of the conflict in 2011, the country’s GDP has declined more than half, and unemployment has grown three times.