United Nations Says More Than 13 Million Syrians Need Assistance

بقلم: Pavel Jacomino
2017-11-22 15:16:15

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United Nations, November 22 (RHC)-- The United Nations says more than 13 million Syrians are in need of aid despite a relative drop in fighting between the government troops and foreign-backed militant outfits in the war-torn Arab country in recent months.  “Some 13.1 million people in Syria require humanitarian assistance. Of these, 5.6 million people are in acute need,” said the UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in a statement, adding that the figure showed a slight drop comparing to 13.5 million people in need last year. 

“Entering the seventh year of the crisis, the scale, severity and complexity of needs across Syria remain overwhelming,” the statement further read.  In late October, it made a similar announcement, saying conflict and violations of international humanitarian law continued to be the main drivers of humanitarian need, with civilians in many parts of the Middle Eastern country enduring “massive suffering.” 

However, Under-Secretary-General for OCHA Mark Lowcock said at the time that some 6.3 million were in “acute need” of aid. The figure shows that the relative drop in violence has also helped the government and the charity groups to deliver aids to some seven hundred thousand people, who were in desperate need of assistance.  The UN's Children's Fund (UNICEF) says more than 1,100 children in Syria's Ghouta are suffering from malnutrition. 

Back in May, the fourth round of the intra-Syrian talks, held in Kazakhstan's capital, Astana, resulted in an agreement on creating four de-escalation zones across Syria, with Russia, Iran, and Turkey serving as guarantor states.  The safe zones cover the Syrian provinces of Idlib and Homs as well as the Eastern Ghouta region near Damascus and the country’s southern border with Jordan.  They have sharply reduced fighting in the conflict zones.  The UN says 40 percent of the needy are children, noting that people in besieged or so-called “hard-to-reach” areas are particularly vulnerable. 

According to the UN figures, over 330,000 people have lost their lives in Syria since the foreign-back militancy began its reign of terror in 2011.  The world body also says that the violence has already displaced over half of Syria’s 18 million-strong population, both internally and abroad, as refugees. 

In recent months, Syrian government troops, backed by Iranian military advisors and Russian airstrikes, landed hard blows on Takfiri terrorists. Over the weekend, Syrian troops also managed to retake the last urban center from the Daesh Takfiri terrorist group, days after Iraqi forces also declared that they had recapture Daesh’s last stronghold in the Arab country. 



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