NEW YORK/GENEVA/ROME – In less than a month, the Security Council resolution that allows the United Nations and our implementing partners to provide life-saving humanitarian aid to northwest Syria from across the border with Türkiye will expire.
The 15-member Security Council will decide whether to renew it or not.
This decision is critical for the lives and well-being of 4.1 million people trapped in the non-Government-controlled northwest of Syria bordering Türkiye. Many rely on humanitarian aid to survive, especially people who are displaced. Some 80 percent of those in need are women and children. Over 3.2 million people are food insecure and need food assistance.
Our priority and only goal is to get humanitarian aid to families who need it in the safest, most direct and efficient way, away from political calculations or agendas. Last year alone, critical aid from the UN and our partners crossed the border into northwest Syria helping and protecting 2.4 million people each month.
Over the past year, we were able to send convoys from Government-controlled areas of Syria across internal frontlines into northwest Syria with nutrition, health, food and education supplies for more than 40,000 people. That is welcome progress, and we continue to increase these deliveries. However, much more is needed.
In addition to the important assistance provided via convoys, affected people also need comprehensive access to basic services.
We urge the members of the Security Council to renew UN Security Council Resolution 2585, authorizing continued cross-border assistance for an additional 12 months. We must also secure regular access to northwest Syria from Government-controlled areas. We must increase the number of channels of humanitarian assistance and maximize humanitarian access.
Failure to renew the resolution will have dire humanitarian consequences. It will immediately disrupt the UN’s life-saving aid operation, plunging people in northwest Syria into deeper misery and threatening their access to the food, medical care, clean water, shelter, and protection from gender-based violence currently offered by UN-backed operations.
Over the years, funding for this lifeline operation has been dwindling. Amid other critical crises globally, we call for predictable funding to support the delivery of assistance to northwest Syria.
The lives of millions of people depend on it.
We are counting on members of the Security Council to enable our vital work to continue. The people of Syria will be counting on them to make the right choice.
Signed by
- Martin Griffiths, Emergency Relief Coordinator, OCHA
- Catherine Russell, Executive Director, UNICEF
- Natalia Kanem, Executive Director, UNFPA
- António Vitorino, Director General, IOM
- David Beasley, Executive Director, WFP
- Filippo Grandi, High Commissioner For Refugees, UNHCR
- Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director General, WHO
For more information please contact:
Jens Laerke, OCHA, +41 79 472 97 50, laerke@un.org
Malene Jensen, UNICEF, 1 917 470 2019, mjensen@unicef.org
Eddie Wright, UNFPA, +1 917 831 2074, ewright@unfpa.org
Paul Dillon, IOM, +41 79 636 98 74, pdillon@iom.int
Abeer Etefa, WFP Cairo, +20 106 6634352, abeer.etefa@wfp.org
Shaza Moghraby, WFP New York, + 1 929 289 9867 shada.moghraby@wfp.org
In Amman: Rula Amin, UNHCR/Amman, aminr@unhcr.org +962790045849
In Geneva: Mathew Saltmarsh, UNHCR Geneva, saltmars@unhcr.org +41799679936
Christian Lindmeier, WHO, +41 22 791 2222, mediainquiries@who.int
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Originally published by UNHCR on 16 June 2022