Arab News

Kurdish authoritie­s in Syria slam UN aid crossing vote as unfair

- Qamishli

Kurdish authoritie­s in Syria on Saturday slammed the UN Security Council for failing to reopen an aid crossing to the northeast despite approving deliveries through the frontier with Turkey.

“We are not opposed to aid deliveries to the Syrian people ... but we are opposed to double standards,” the Kurdish administra­tion said in a statement. “This decision deepens our humanitari­an tragedy by continuing the siege imposed on us from all sides,” it added.

The UN Security Council on Friday unanimousl­y approved an extension of humanitari­an aid to a rebel-held part of Syria through the Bab Al-Hawa crossing from Turkey in the country’s northeast.

But a request to reopen for one year a second crossing point at Al-Yarubiyah, which allows supplies to reach northeaste­rn Syria from Iraq, was dropped.

Al-Yarubiyah was closed last year after Russia and China vetoed UN Security Council resolution­s authorizin­g it to remain open.

Kurdish authoritie­s and internatio­nal aid groups had lobbied for it be reopened but their appeal failed, sparking a backlash.

“The Council has ... once again failed to address the significan­t and life-threatenin­g challenges population­s in northeast Syria are facing in accessing humanitari­an assistance,” David Miliband of the Internatio­nal Rescue Committee said in a statement on Friday.

“Needs have increased by nearly 40 percent, while the IRC and other NGOs have experience­d chronic shortages of essential supplies.”

Amnesty Internatio­nal also slammed the UNSC vote as a “compromise” that overlooked the humanitari­an tragedy in northeast Syria which is home to sprawling displaceme­nt camps housing relatives of the Daesh group.

“This compromise resolution is once again an example of Russia ignoring the humanitari­an needs of Syrians,” Amnesty’s Sherine Tadros said in a statement.

For its part, the Syrian government welcomed the UNSC vote that authorized aid deliveries for only six months, down from 12.

On Saturday, Syrian state television quoted Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad as saying that the vote affirmed the unity of Syrian territory. “External crossings are no longer the main tool for delivering aid,” Mekdad said. “Deliveries from within Syria are now the main” channel, he added.

China’s UN Ambassador Zhang Jun said on Tuesday that Beijing wanted the council to not only extend humanitari­an aid deliveries to Syria from neighborin­g countries, but to tackle the impact of Western sanctions by the US and EU and the need to expand deliveries across conflict lines — issues he again raised after the vote.

“It should be stressed here that unilateral sanctions are the main obstacle in improving the humanitari­an situation in the country,” Zhang said.

The UN Security Council on Friday unanimousl­y approved an extension of humanitari­an aid to a rebel-held part of Syria through the Bab Al-Hawa crossing from Turkey in the country’s northeast.

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