Lethbridge Herald

EU renews Syria sanctions as conflict continues

-

The European Union is prolonging for another year its sanctions against Syrian President Bashar Assad and other top political officials, military officers and business people over the regime’s continued crackdown on civilians in the conflict-torn country.

The European Council, headquarte­rs of the 27 EU countries, said in a statement Thursday that the sanctions would be extended until June 1, 2021, more than a decade after the conflict began, “as the repression of the civilian population continues.”

“The Syrian people have had to draw on extraordin­ary reserves of resilience,” EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said, and he added that the bloc “remains committed to use every tool at its disposal to push for a political solution to the conflict that would benefit all Syrians and put an end to the ongoing repression.”

The Syrian conflict is now in its 10th year. The United Nations says that over half the population has been forced to flee their homes, more than 11 million people — nearly five million of them children — need humanitari­an assistance, and almost eight million people don’t have reliable access to food.

Eight out of 10 Syrians live below the poverty line, making less than $100 a month, and the country is mired in an economic crisis. Syria’s currency has spiraled downward, sending prices of basic commoditie­s soaring. Economic activity is also being hurt by restrictio­ns imposed to combat the coronaviru­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada