Daily Sabah (Turkey)

UN extends cross-border aid to NW Syria via Turkey for 6 months

The cross-border delivery of aid is essential for meeting the humanitari­an needs of all Syrians, the United Nations says

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THE UNITED Nations on Monday highlighte­d that cross-border humanitari­an aid to opposition-held northwest Syria remains “essential,” as the measure was extended for six months de facto without a new Security Council vote.

The council had previously renewed the authorizat­ion allowing aid into opposition­held areas in the country’s northwest “for a period of six months ... until Jan. 10, 2022,” through the crossing at Bab al-Hawa on the Syrian border with Turkey.

The text provided for “an extension of an additional six months, that is, until July 10, 2022,” subject to a report by the U.N. Secretary-General.

For the West, the renewal to July had been interprete­d as automatic, while Russia has raised the possibilit­y of requesting a new Security Council vote, though it has not taken that step. In his December report, U.N. Chief Antonio Guterres had stressed the impossibil­ity of replacing at this stage the cross-border mechanism for one that crossed front lines from Damascus.

Moscow favors this method as recognitio­n of the Assad regime’s sovereignt­y over the whole country.

Aid through the Bab al-Hawa crossing primarily serves roughly 3 million people living in the Idlib region, which remains outside the regime’s control.

“The cross-border delivery of aid is essential,” U.N. spokespers­on Stephane Dujarric said during his daily briefing.

“We need aid to be delivered through cross-border and through cross-line. Those are essential elements for us to meet the humanitari­an needs of all Syrians.”

Asked about the lack of a new Security Council vote, he said “we would welcome any decision that would allow us to continue with this vital cross-border aid.” In June, the U.N. said around 2.4 million people in Idlib were in need of humanitari­an aid. The U.N. agencies warned that northweste­rn Syria faces the “worst situation” since the war started, with low food security and, due to the unavailabi­lity of medicines, the spread of diseases leading to deaths. Russia and Iran are the chief supporters of Assad – who has wrestled back control of most of Syria after a brutal decadelong civil war – and argue that Damascus as the sovereign power should have sole prerogativ­e over aid deliveries.

 ?? ?? An aerial view of the Kafr Arouk camp for internally displaced Syrians after heavy rainfall in Idlib, northweste­rn Syria, Dec. 20, 2021.
An aerial view of the Kafr Arouk camp for internally displaced Syrians after heavy rainfall in Idlib, northweste­rn Syria, Dec. 20, 2021.

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