Weekend Herald

Aid convoy still waiting at border

-

Twenty trucks loaded with desperatel­y needed aid for eastern Aleppo crossed into a buffer zone between Turkey and Syria yesterday, a high- level UN official said.

“The 20 trucks . . . have passed over the Turkish border, they are in the buffer zone between the Turkish and Syrian border,” Jan Egeland, head of the United Nations humanitari­an taskforce for Syria, told reporters.

“They’ve been waiting and sleeping at the border now for 48 hours. So they could go on a minute’s notice,” he said, voicing hope the aid could be delivered to eastern Aleppo today.

UN Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura warned, however, that the aid could not move into Syria’s second city before the Castello Road supply route had been fully secured, as agreed in marathon United States- Russia talks in Geneva last week.

Those talks led to a fragile truce, which took effect Monday evening local time, in the latest bid to end a five- and- a- half- year conflict that has killed more than 300,000 people.

Egeland hailed that it was “largely holding”.

But while violence had reduced significan­tly, de Mistura harshly criticised Damascus for failing to produce the promised permits allowing aid convoys to move into besieged areas in the war- ravaged country.

“We cannot let days of this reduction of violence to be wasted by not moving forward” on aid deliveries, de Mistura said.

Egeland echoed those concerns, saying “the bad news is that we are not using this window of opportunit­y so far to reach all of these places with humanitari­an assistance”.

He said that “not a single permit is in hand for our people, and if they don’t have that they cannot load and they cannot go.”

No such permits are needed for eastern Aleppo, which enjoys a “special status” under the Russia- US deal, de Mistura said, pointing out that the regime would not inspect humanitari­an cargo travelling to the city on the Castello Road.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand