UNITED NATIONS, Oct 28 (NNN-AGENCIES) – UN Undersecretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs, Martin Griffiths, said yesterday, more aid is needed for Syrians, as winter approaches.
Daily life in Syria is becoming less and less affordable. Over 90 percent of the population now live below the poverty line. Many people are forced to make very difficult choices to make ends meet, and thus, face greater risks of exploitation, he told the Security Council.
On top of increasing poverty, the water crisis and worsening food security, people in Syria are also facing a resurgence of COVID-19. Cases are surging, intensive care units are at full capacity, and vaccination rates remain just below two percent, he said.
“And now, exhausted by years of conflict, poverty and the pandemic, Syrians are about to face another bitter winter. As temperatures start to drop, rain, cold and winter conditions will compound hardship for millions of people,” he warned.
Although the United Nations and its humanitarian partners are doing everything possible to assist the most vulnerable, significant funding gaps remain, he said.
“We need an urgent injection of life-saving aid, especially as Syrians prepare for winter. We need more aid for early recovery and livelihoods. Syrians want to be able to support themselves, with dignity. And we need to expand access to basic social services. Syrians, like all of us, want to send their children to school, to have electricity and water, and a reliable health clinic. That is the least that we can help them to achieve,” said Griffiths. “And, of course, perhaps most importantly, Syrians need peace and the support and the efforts of the (UN) special envoy.”
The United Nations and its partners continue to make every effort to scale up assistance.
The World Food Programme’s delivery of food aid reached Idlib governorate in Aug. Preparations are under way for another World Food Programme cross-line delivery in Nov.
And beyond this, the United Nations developed a plan for a series of regular and predictable inter-agency cross-line operations, to deliver multi-sectoral assistance in the coming six months, and to complement the assistance coming across the border, he said.
The United Nations already submitted request for the first inter-agency convoy to the government of Syria. The support of both the Syrian and Turkish governments and relevant parties in North-west Syria for the plan, will also be critical, he said.
“I’m quietly optimistic that we will be able to further expand cross-line access over the coming months. And you can be sure that we will certainly do our part. I urge, therefore, all concerned parties, to ensure that cross-line missions and the aid distributions associated with them proceed without delay,” said Griffiths.
When it comes to delivering life-saving aid, all channels should be made, and kept, available. Cross-border assistance remains the central part of the humanitarian response to ensure aid effectively and transparently reaches millions of people in need in North-west Syria, he said.