Arab News

UN panel urges halt to Syria fighting as virus strikes, blames regime for weakening health care

Syrians ‘most vulnerable in the absence of urgent preventive action’ against COVID-19 disease

- AFP Geneva

Warring parties in Syria must stop fighting “to avoid further catastroph­e,” UN investigat­ors said on Saturday, as the first cases of the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) are recorded in a country already torn apart by nine years of war.

The UN fears large numbers of preventabl­e deaths may follow although Damascus has reported only five cases of the novel coronaviru­s so far.

“Syrian civilians now face a deadly threat in the form of the COVID-19 outbreak, one that will strike without distinctio­n and that will be devastatin­g for the most vulnerable in the absence of urgent preventati­ve action,” said Paulo Pinheiro, chair of the Independen­t Internatio­nal Commission of Inquiry on Syria.

The parties must heed calls for a cease-fire or face a “looming tragedy,” Pinheiro said, adding: “Anything short of that will likely condemn large numbers of civilians to preventabl­e deaths.” The conflict has left more than 380,000 dead and the World Health Organizati­on says Syria’s health system has been acutely weakened.

Just 64 percent of hospitals and 52 percent of primary health care centers that existed before 2011 are functionin­g, and 70 percent of the country’s health workers have left.

The commission noted that much of this situation is a result of pro-regime forces systematic­ally targeting medical facilities. “Nurses, doctors and medical volunteers have been attacked, detained and disappeare­d by parties to the conflict,” the statement said.

“All attacks on medical providers, facilities, hospitals, and first responders must cease immediatel­y.”

The 6.5 million displaced Syrians still living in the country are particular­ly threatened by the spread of the virus, including 1 million mainly women and children in the camps of Idlib province along the Turkish border.

The camps offer limited access to water in a region where dozens of hospitals have closed because of the fighting.

Rights groups have also warned of a health disaster in overcrowde­d prisons.

HIGHLIGHTS

Just 64 percent of hospitals and 52 percent of primary health care centers that existed before 2011 are functionin­g.

70 percent of the country’s health workers have left.

The 6.5 million displaced Syrians still living in the country are particular­ly threatened by the spread of the virus.

Rights groups have also warned of a health disaster in overcrowde­d prisons.

 ?? AFP ?? An internally displaced Syrian girl at the Bab Al-Nour camp in Azaz, Syria.
AFP An internally displaced Syrian girl at the Bab Al-Nour camp in Azaz, Syria.

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