The Telegram (St. John's)

Millions in Syria face disaster without aid: UN

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REYHANLI, Turkey — Millions of people in northwest Syria face disaster if the United Nations fails to approve an extension of cross-border humanitari­an operations next month, a senior UN aid official said on Thursday.

Some three million people, many of them displaced by fighting elsewhere in Syria during the decade-long conflict, have sought shelter near the border with Turkey, outside the control of President Bashar al-assad’s government.

Access for cross-border aid from Turkey was reduced last year to just one crossing point after opposition from Russia and China — permanent Security Council members — to renewing other crossings. A new showdown is likely next month when the operation’s mandate must be renewed.

“It’s going to be a disaster if the Security Council resolution is not extended. We know that people are really going to suffer,” said Mark Cutts, UN deputy regional humanitari­an co-ordinator for the Syria crisis.

“Our expectatio­n from the council is that they put the needs of the civilians first,” Cutts told Reuters at an aid supply centre in the Turkish border town of Reyhanli. “In northwest Syria, you have some of the most vulnerable people anywhere in the world.”

Currently around 1,000 UN trucks a month enter Syria at the single crossing point of

Bab al-hawa to deliver food, medical supplies and humanitari­an aid, trying to meet the needs of four out of five people in northwest Syria.

“This is their lifeline,” U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomasgree­nfield told reporters on a visit to the area. “Over the last year and a half, some members of the Security Council succeeded in shamefully closing two other crossings into Syria.”

“Bab al-hawa is literally all that is left ... If it is closed, it will cause senseless cruelty.”

Announcing an additional

US$240 million in funding for Syrians and their host communitie­s, Thomasgree­nfield said she was also willing to work with Russia to find ways for aid to be delivered “cross-line” from Syrian government-controlled areas.

Russia, which supports Assad, has accused his Western opponents of ignoring the role that could be played by supplies brought cross-line from Damascus.

“We have spent more than one year negotiatin­g on both sides to have both cross-line and cross-border aid,” Cutts told the U.S. envoy in a briefing near the border. “Despite all our efforts, we have not managed to get a single truck cross-line. This is not for a lack of trying from the UN side, but rather because it is a war zone.”

In addition to the difficulti­es over restricted access, the aid operation was starved of cash, he said.

“What we really need is to scale up funding. We need more access, not less. Take that back with you to the United Nations Security Council,” Cutts told Thomasgree­nfield.

 ?? TUVAN GUMRUKCU • REUTERS ?? U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-greenfield talks to a rescue worker as she visits the Cilvegozu border gate, located opposite the Syrian commercial crossing point Bab al-hawa, in Reyhanli, Hatay province, Turkey, on Thursday.
TUVAN GUMRUKCU • REUTERS U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-greenfield talks to a rescue worker as she visits the Cilvegozu border gate, located opposite the Syrian commercial crossing point Bab al-hawa, in Reyhanli, Hatay province, Turkey, on Thursday.

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