Over 1 Million People At Risk of Hunger in Syria if Cross-Border and Resolution Not Renewed, Say Aid Groups
Ten years on in Syria, the need for humanitarian assistance has never been greater for 22 million civilians caught up in this horrific conflict. Some 80% of the population now live below the poverty line and 9.3 million people are food insecure. Access is critical to ensure that all humanitarian agencies can continue to provide life-saving assistance.
If border crossings are closed off, the work of the entire humanitarian community could be in jeopardy and the consequences will be disastrous. This cannot happen. Concern Worldwide fully supports Ireland and Norway’s efforts on the Security Council to reauthorize the cross-border resolution and also urges the Council to urgently reinstate the Bab al Salam and Al Yarubiyah crossings.
To see the full text of the joint release, please see below:
Thursday, June 10 – Aid agencies are warning of a looming humanitarian catastrophe if the UN Security Council fails to renew a resolution allowing lifesaving aid delivered cross-border to reach Syria. The resolution is set to expire in exactly a month’s time on July 10th. NGOs are warning that a failure to renew would put access to food assistance for more than 1 million people at stake, as well as COVID-19 vaccinations, critical medical supplies and humanitarian assistance for many more.
A group of 42 NGOs are warning that the provision of food supplies would be impossible to replace at the scale offered by the UN, which would be forced to stop operating if the resolution is not renewed. The World Food Programme provides 1.4 million Syrians with food baskets each month through the Bab al Hawa crossing. If the Security Council fails to support a renewal, these supplies would run out by September 2021. NGOs estimate they only have capacity to scale up to meet the needs of 300,000 people, leaving over 1 million without food assistance.
A failure to renew the resolution would also put a halt to the UN-led COVID-19 vaccination campaign for people living in North West Syria, where there have been at least 24,257 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 680 reported deaths , amid a spike in infection rates in the last month. The actual number of COVID-19 cases is likely higher due to low testing capacities.
Northwest Syria received its first batch of coronavirus vaccines through the Bab al Hawa border crossing at the Turkish border last month, but the continuation of this campaign relies on renewing the UN resolution, agencies said.
In the North West, there are 2.8 million people in need of humanitarian assistance that can only be reached cross-border. The majority are women and children, many of whom have been displaced multiple times, as ongoing cycles of fighting have left no reprieve. In 2020, the authorization of cross-border assistance allowed humanitarian organizations to reach over 2.4 million people in need a month in the North West, including food for 1.7 million people, nutrition assistance for 85,000, and education for 78,000 children.
After ten years of conflict, the number of people in need across Syria are at their highest ever levels, growing 20% in the last year alone. Syrians are contending with record levels of food insecurity and economic hardship, ten years into the conflict. They now face the added risk of COVID-19, which continues to spread at an alarming rate while the healthcare infrastructure, decimated by years of conflict, remains woefully inadequate to respond.
Despite increasing needs, the Security Council has voted twice over the past 18 months to restrict humanitarian access to the country, leaving just one crossing for life-saving UN assistance to reach North West Syria, and completely cutting off UN cross-border assistance to the North East, with dire consequences.
NGOs warn that reliance on just one crossing point to the North West, following the removal of the Bab al Salam crossing by the Security Council in July last year, puts ongoing aid access and a successful COVID-19 vaccination campaign to the region at risk. Despite a ceasefire agreed in March 2020, just three months ago the one remaining crossing, Bab al Hawa, came under attack, causing damage to NGO warehouses and humanitarian supplies. Ongoing violence could cut off the only remaining access to food, vaccinations, and other critical supplies for people in North West Syria.
NGOs point to the fall out of the Council’s decision in January 2020 to restrict the UN’s access to North East Syria through Al Yarubiyah as an important lesson of the fatal consequences such decisions have. Since the border has been closed to the UN, only a handful of medical shipments have made it to the region through alternative routes, with health facilities consequently facing stock-outs of special medicines, such as insulin and resources needed to tackle COVID-19 such as PPE and ventilators. In Al Hol camp, NGOs have reported that approximately 30% of patients with chronic diseases cannot be covered through the medication available in the camp.
NGOs are calling on the Security Council to reauthorize the cross-border resolution for another 12 months, and to reinstate the closed crossings, Bab al Salam in the North West and Al Yarubiyah in the North East, to ensure Syrians in need, wherever they are, can access lifesaving aid and humanitarian actors are able to respond effectively to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Inger Ashing, CEO of Save the Children International said:
David Miliband, President and CEO of the International Rescue Committee said:
Sofía Sprechmann Sineiro, Secretary General of CARE International:
Tjada D’Oyen McKenna, CEO of Mercy Corps said:
Andrew Morley, President and CEO of World Vision International:
Husni Al-Barazi, Founder of Big Heart Foundation – Vice-Chairman of ARCS said:
Signed by,
- Save the Children
- International Rescue Committee
- CARE International
- World Vision International
- Norwegian Refugee Council
- Oxfam
- Mercy Corps
- Concern Worldwide
- InterAction
- Humanity & Inclusion
- Islamic Relief USA
- MedGlobal
- Relief International
- Syrian American Medical Society (SAMS)
- Syria Relief and Development
- Syria Relief
- Terre des Hommes Italy
- GOAL USA
- People in Need
- Big Heart Foundation
- Medair
- Rahma Worldwide for Aid and Development
- American Relief Coalition for Syria
- Bonyan Organization
- Social Development International SDI
- Syrian Expatriate Medical Association (SEMA)
- Union of Medical Care and Relief Organizations (UOSSM)
- The Syrian Center for Media and Freedom of Expression (SCM)
- Ihsan Relief and Development
- International Humanitarian Relief (IHR)
- Syria British Council
- Kareemat Center
- ZOA
- Zenobia Association For Syrian Women
- Violet Organization for Relief and Development
- IYD Humanitarian Relief Association
- Bousla Development & Innovation
- ONG Rescate Syria
- Orange Organization
- Un Ponte Per (UPP)
- Life for Relief and Development
*Numbers as of June 7th from the EWARN Task Force