More than 20 human rights groups issued a joint plea today for the international community to take responsibility for suffering civilians as Syria's war approaches its fifth year.
In a report entitled "Failing Syria", the organisations criticised world powers for not implementing a series of UN Security Council resolutions on the conflict.
Three resolutions adopted in 2014 urged armed actors in Syria to protect non-combatants and aimed to secure greater access to humanitarian aid for millions of Syrians.
More From This Section
"Without action by individual governments, the demands within these resolutions remain little more than words on a page."
Last year was the deadliest yet in the conflict, with at least 76,000 people killed out of a total of more than 210,000 since it began on March 15, 2011 with peaceful pro-democracy demonstrations.
Since then, 11.4 million Syrians have fled their homes and nearly four million have left the country in what the UN has called the worst refugee crisis in 20 years.
According to the report, Syria's humanitarian crisis is worsening at an alarming rate. Nearly 10 million people inside the country do not have enough to eat, and more than 11 million are in urgent need of clean water.
"This is a betrayal of our ideals, because we're not supposed to be watching people suffer and die in 2015," said Jan Egeland, secretary general of the Norwegian Refugee Council, which contributed to the report.
The 21 rights groups accused government forces of systematically using rape and sexual harassment as methods of war, and rebel groups of kidnapping women and children for use in prisoner exchanges.
Both regime and opposition forces indiscriminately target civilian infrastructure, including schools and health facilities, they said.
"I was in class when my school was hit. We ran out of the school right away," said Basma, an eight-year-old Syrian girl quoted in the report.
"I have never seen my school or my friends again. I miss them a lot."
The report, whose signatories included Oxfam, International Rescue Committee, and Save the Children, criticised warring parties in Syria for blocking access for humanitarian organisations to some of the most devastated areas.