UN humanitarian chief demands more access to Syria


Damascus, Mar 30 (IANS): Mark Lowcock, the Under-Secretary-General for UN Humanitarian Affairs, has demanded for more access to Syria as humanitarian needs have surged to an unprecedented level.

The UN estimates that 13.4 million people across Syria require humanitarian aid, 20 per cent more than last year, he told the Security Council in a briefing on Monday.

The deep economic decay from a decade of war has deepened further over the last year, not least as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, with the Syrian pound falling to its lowest point ever against the US dollar this month, Xinhua news agency quoted the top diplomat as saying.

Because food is imported, one consequence of the depreciation is that food prices are at unprecedented levels, leaving more than 12 million people without reliable access to food, he added.

There are more than 4 million people in northwest Syria and more than 75 per cent of them depend on aid to meet their basic needs.

The cross-border operation reaches almost 85 per cent of these people in need every month.

The UN cross-border operation is too small to prevent malnutrition in the region, according to Lowcock.

"More money and more border crossings would address that."

The UN has also been continuing to try to seek agreement on cross-line deliveries to the northwest, but the world body has yet to find an approach everyone can agree, he said.

"Discussions continue. While we deliver 1,000 trucks a month of aid cross border into the northwest, we have yet to see even a single truck, just one, cross line."

In the northeast, cross-line humanitarian assistance has scaled up, butut needs still surpass the ability of the UN to address them, he noted.

"We estimate that 1.8 million people require assistance in areas of northeast Syria outside of the control of the (Syrian) government. Over 70 per cent of them are considered to be in extreme need -- well above the national average."

Reputable aid organisations tell the UN that the availability and accessibility of health care in the northeast is insufficient.

Few health issues are adequately addressed due to the limited functionality and capacity of health care facilities, the lack of adequately trained medical staff, and shortages of essential medicines.

NGOs operating in the northeast report imminent stock-outs of critical medicines like insulin, and cardiovascular and antibacterial medicines in multiple facilities, said Lowcock.

 

  

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Title: UN humanitarian chief demands more access to Syria



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