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epa04552404 Young Syrian refugees stand in snow outside their tents at the Deir Zanoun refugee camp near Zahleh town, Bekaa valley, east Lebanon, 09 January 2015. According to local reports ongoing snowstorms over the last four days have led to mountain roads in the Bekaa Valley being closed and left at least two Syrian refugees in Lebanon dead. EPA/LUCIE PARSAGHIAN Image Credit: EPA

Beirut: Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency says four Bangladeshi workers suffocated as a result of faulty heating in their room in a mountainous region north of the country.

The agency says the four were found dead Saturday in the Dinniyeh region. NNA gave no further details.

The Middle East has been hit with a severe winter storm since Tuesday, affecting tens of thousands of Syrian refugees living in tents around the region.

The latest deaths raise to seven the number of people killed by the weather in Lebanon since Tuesday, including three Syrians.

Activists say several people died in Syria as well because of the storm. Syria’s main Western-backed opposition group on Thursday appealed to the international community to help Syrian refugees and internally displaced people suffering amid the snow storm.

The wintry weather, which swooped across much of the Mideast on Tuesday, mostly silenced the guns in Syria and grounded government warplanes because of bad visibility. It killed three Syrians in Lebanon and two in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo on Wednesday, according to Lebanese security officials and Syrian activists.

The Syrian National Coalition’s interim premier, Ahmad Touma, said in Istanbul on Thursday that the situation on the ground is “catastrophic” because of low temperatures and lack of tents in refugee camps.

Touma said that over the past two months alone, some 2,000 families have fled the violence and that 800 of them are without shelter.

“The storm has bad effects and good ones,” said Beibares Tellawi, an activist in the besieged neighborhood of Waer in the central Syrian city of Homs. “We have no blankets, no heating but the regime stopped its airstrikes.”

Another prominent opposition figure, Suhair Atassi, added her appeal for aid from “countries that are friendly to the Syrian people.”

The Syrian war has so far killed more than 200,000 people and led to a massive humanitarian crisis, forcing more than 3 million to seek refuge abroad, mostly in Lebanon, Turkey, Jordan and Iraq. The war, which began nearly four years ago, has also displaced some 6.5 million Syrians within the country whose pre-war population numbered about 23 million people.

In the eastern Lebanese village of Al Marj on Thursday, Syrian refugees huddled in tents and complained that they had no money to buy diesel or wood for heating. Some were placing plastic bottles and bags as well as trash in their stoves for heating.

Many of the refugees in Al Marj said humanitarian organizations were not coming to help them.