Khaleej Times

Syria aid likely to shift towards rehabilita­tion: Red Cross chief

- AFP

geneva — Providing humanitari­an aid in war-ravaged Syria looks set to shift increasing­ly away from emergency, life-saving assistance towards rehabilita­ting devastated areas to help Syrians return home, the head of the Red Cross said on Wednesday.

Peter Maurer told reporters in Geneva that the conflict appeared to be entering a new stage, with fewer “big-battle” moments and perhaps even a chance to provide displaced Syrians with a sense of normalcy after seven years of devastatin­g violence.

“Syria to us looks very different from Syria last year or from Syria two years ago,” Maurer said.

Syria has been torn apart a war that has left more than 350,000 people dead and displaced millions. But Maurer said that as the situation in many parts of the country appears to be stabilisin­g, he expected to see a shift away from a pure focus on emergency assistance towards reestablis­hing services in areas people want to return to.

“For us it is just important that we get the rehabilita­tion thing going,” he said.

Maurer pointed out that Syria now appeared to be split into fairly clearly defined territorie­s, and said the “big actors” seemed ready to work towards “consensus to stop the war and to go into a phase of more tranquilit­y.”

“I have the impression we are at a little bit of a threshold moment,” he said, adding that he believed “we are entering the post-big battle era.”

The Damascus regime has retaken large parts of Syria since 2015 with Russia’s backing, but opposition groups with Western backing still control most of the northern Idlib province.

Turkey also controls an area in the north after launching an operation into Syria in January to root out the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) militia in the Afrin enclave.

Maurer acknowledg­ed that the situation could still spiral in a “dangerous” direction.

But he said his recent visits to Moscow and other capitals had convinced him there was now a “minimal consensus” to stabilise the country. —

 ?? AP ?? Peter Maurer, president of the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross, speaks about the ICRC’s work at the European headquarte­rs of the UN in Geneva, Switzerlan­d. —
AP Peter Maurer, president of the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross, speaks about the ICRC’s work at the European headquarte­rs of the UN in Geneva, Switzerlan­d. —

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