‘Dark Day’ Prevents Cross-Border Humanitarian Aid to Millions of Syrians

Syrian women activists at the Bab al-Hawa border crossing with Turkey during a rally to demand the extension of the resolution to deliver humanitarian aid across the border. (DPA)
Syrian women activists at the Bab al-Hawa border crossing with Turkey during a rally to demand the extension of the resolution to deliver humanitarian aid across the border. (DPA)
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‘Dark Day’ Prevents Cross-Border Humanitarian Aid to Millions of Syrians

Syrian women activists at the Bab al-Hawa border crossing with Turkey during a rally to demand the extension of the resolution to deliver humanitarian aid across the border. (DPA)
Syrian women activists at the Bab al-Hawa border crossing with Turkey during a rally to demand the extension of the resolution to deliver humanitarian aid across the border. (DPA)

Russia on Friday vetoed a UN Security Council resolution that would have extended cross-border aid from Turkey to some four million people in opposition-controlled northwest Syria by one year without Damascus's backing.

Western powers then voted down a competing resolution put forward by Moscow that proposed extending approval by just six months.

The aid is a lifeline for more than 2.4 million people in the northwestern Idlib region of Syria, under the control of extremists and rebels.

The authorization for the aid deliveries across the Syrian-Turkish border at Bab al-Hawa, which has been in effect since 2014, is set to expire Sunday.

Thirteen of the 15 Council members voted in favor of the text proposed by Norway and Ireland. China, which often votes the same way as Russia, chose to abstain.

The Norway-Ireland text would have provided for a six-month extension until mid-January 2023, and then an additional six-month extension “unless the Council decides otherwise.”

The extension would also be conditional on a “substantive report” by the United Nations secretary-general, including on the operation’s transparency, progress on channeling aid across the front line, and progress on meeting humanitarian needs.

Diplomatic efforts by Western powers, especially the United States, France, Britain and senior UN officials, failed to convince Russia that it is not the right time to deliver urgent aid from regime-led areas through the battle fronts to the opposition-held areas.

The Council held a minute’s silence for former Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe, who was assassinated while campaigning, and Angolan ex-president Jose Eduardo dos Santos, who died in Spain.

Ahead of the voting over a UNSCR resolution drafted by Norway and Ireland, Permanent Representative of Norway to the UN Mona Juul said Ireland and Norway have engaged carefully and consistently with all Council members throughout this negotiation.

“The result of our efforts is the amended draft resolution which you now have before you. Throughout, we have been guided solely by the humanitarian needs of the Syrian people.”

She explained that the negotiations started with 12 months in the first draft in blue.

A vast majority of the Council members support such a 12-month extension, but the amended text has a 6+6 month extension, she noted, affirming that this is their effort to reach a compromise.

She asked all members to support the draft resolution.

US envoy Linda Thomas-Greenfield said her country voted in favor of the bill to meet Syrian people’s pressing needs.

She termed it “a dark, dark day” for the Security Council, stressing that it was a life-or-death vote for the Syrian people and Russia chose the latter.

“It is unfathomable that one security council member, Russia, put their own political interests above the humanitarian needs of the Syrian people,” she said.

Following the veto of the resolution, Irish ambassador Byrne Nason expressed her country’s extreme disappointment.

“As penholders on the resolution, we have one message: this is not over,” she stressed, vowing to continue to work with all UNSC members to ensure life-saving aid reaches Syrians in need.

British ambassador Barbara Woodward said Moscow had deployed a “deeply irresponsible veto that will have a tragic impact.”

Russia's deputy ambassador to the world body, Dmitry Polyanskiy, meanwhile accused the west of “stubbornness” and said the resolution “ignored the sovereignty of Damascus.”



Reduced to Rubble: Palestinians Return to ‘Unrecognizable’ Gaza

Gazans tour their destroyed neighborhood on Sunday. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Gazans tour their destroyed neighborhood on Sunday. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Reduced to Rubble: Palestinians Return to ‘Unrecognizable’ Gaza

Gazans tour their destroyed neighborhood on Sunday. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Gazans tour their destroyed neighborhood on Sunday. (Asharq Al-Awsat)

Palestinians returning to their homes in Gaza were shocked at the extent of the destruction and devastation left behind by the Israeli war machine after 15 months of war and as a ceasefire took effect on Sunday.

Asharq Al-Awsat accompanied residents of Jabalia as they returned to their homes and assessed the extent of the destruction.

“Where are our homes?!” asked Amal al-Asakry in despair as she arrived at Jabalia camp, which has been reduced to rubble by Israel. Her house and others have been razed to the ground.

“We have nothing left. Our lives and future... they destroyed our homes and the future of our children,” she told Asharq Al-Awsat.

“I returned to Jabalia hoping to find something left of my house, my clothes and my furniture, but I found nothing. The house has been completely destroyed,” she lamented.

Israel carried out a military operation in Jabalia, Beit Lahia and Beit Hanoun for over a hundred days, using its entire military might to carry out air strikes, ground operations and bomb houses, hospitals and other buildings.

Another resident, Mahmoud al-Sahhar, believed that his house would still be standing after he came across a photograph taken by an Israeli soldier that showed that his house was partially damaged.

When he returned to Jabalia, he was shocked to find out that it had been totally destroyed. “I built this house brick by brick so that I can secure my family’s future,” he told Asharq Al-Awsat, pointing to his home that may have been destroyed shortly before the Israeli withdrawal.

Asharq Al-Awsat's tour of the area showed that no party could come up with a close estimate of the extent of the damage given how massive it is. The area has become unrecognizable due to the destruction and damage.

Plans to remove the rubble from the streets are no longer viable because it is just everywhere. Jabalia has effectively been turned into Gaza’s largest pile of rubble.

Residents couldn’t even get their vehicles and carts to move across the area because roads have been destroyed.

Nemr al-Nimnim told Asharq Al-Awsat: “I was raised in the camp, but I couldn’t recognize any of its roads. It will take years to remove the rubble from Gaza, especially Jabalia and the nearby areas. Reconstruction may take decades.”

He said he was hoping to make a quick return to the camp, “but the area is unlivable. There’s no water or any place that can shelter us. It’s as if an earthquake had destroyed the camp.”

It appears that Israeli forces had deliberately sought to destroy UNRWA centers and other facilities offering services. Infrastructure was also completely destroyed to prevent people from resuming their lives any time soon.

Confronted with the devastation, the residents urged their loved ones to avoid returning to Jabalia and instead head to other areas.

Another resident, Duaa Munir, told Asharq Al-Awsat that she urged her relatives to head to southern Gaza because there is nothing to return to in Jabalia. “There isn’t even any space to set up camps” because of the rubble, she said.

Over a million people are internally displaced in Gaza with the majority seeking refuge in camps along the coast and in central and southern parts of the enclave.

The United Nations has said that Gaza’s reconstruction could take more than 350 years if it remains under an Israeli blockade. Using satellite data, the United Nations estimated last month that 69% of the structures in Gaza have been damaged or destroyed, including more than 245,000 homes. With over 100 trucks working full time, it would take more than 15 years just to clear the rubble away.