Albuquerque Journal

Haley: Nations hosting Syrians need help

In Jordan, UN ambassador calls for more infrastruc­ture aid

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

AMMAN, Jordan — President Donald Trump’s U.N. ambassador called Monday for the United Nations and aid agencies to shift focus in how they support Syrians in need by boosting support for roads, schools and hospitals in neighborin­g countries that have been overwhelme­d by millions of refugees.

Speaking in Jordan, host to some 660,000 Syrian refugees, Nikki Haley argued that lack of coordinati­on among aid agencies has led duplicated efforts and inefficien­cies after seven years of civil war in the Arab country. She drew a distinctio­n between short-term humanitari­an aid — like food and health supplies — and developmen­t assistance that allows countries to boost their infrastruc­ture to accommodat­e the conflict’s uprooted civilians.

“You’ve got a lot of different organizati­ons trying to do the same thing,” Haley said. “The humanitari­an organizati­ons don’t need to get into the developmen­t business. They need to do what they’re good at, and that’s the humanitari­an role. We need to bring in the developmen­t organizati­ons more.”

Haley, who is touring refugee camps and cross-border aid missions on a trip to Jordan and Turkey, said she planned to work on changing the situation when she returns, starting at a meeting with U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres. She said she would press countries to provide more money directly to Jordan, rather than funneling it through aid organizati­ons.

The ambassador’s call for reform reflected the unpleasant reality that after years of bloodshed, Syria’s civil war shows few signs of ending. Neighborin­g countries that have borne the brunt of the refugee crisis had hoped the situation would be temporary and that peace would allow Syrians to return home. Now these government­s are confrontin­g the possibilit­y of hosting hundreds of thousands people for the extended future and what that would mean for strained health care and education systems, and transporta­tion and electric grids.

“We don’t know how long this conflict’s going to last,” Haley said before flying to Turkey. “What we do know is that whether it’s Jordan, whether it’s Turkey, the sustainabi­lity of the situation as it is should keep evolving.”

Some 5 million Syrian refugees are living in Jordan, Turkey, Lebanon and Iraq, countries whose infrastruc­ture needed improvemen­t even before the influx. Unlike in Africa and other parts of the world that have experience­d refugee crises, the vast majority of Syrian refugees aren’t living in refugee camps but among the citizenry of host countries.

 ??  ?? Ambassador Nikki Haley
Ambassador Nikki Haley

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