Looming Catastrophe in North Syria After Suspension of Int’l Aid

A displaced Syrian family in Idlib camps (Asharq Al-Awsat)
A displaced Syrian family in Idlib camps (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Looming Catastrophe in North Syria After Suspension of Int’l Aid

A displaced Syrian family in Idlib camps (Asharq Al-Awsat)
A displaced Syrian family in Idlib camps (Asharq Al-Awsat)

Local humanitarian organizations in northwest Syria warned Monday of “catastrophic consequences” resulting from the closure of Bab al-Hawa crossing on the border with Türkiye, which allows access for medical assistance to millions of citizens, including 2.5 million displaced persons.

The Syria Response Team, an organization concerned with monitoring the humanitarian situation in NW Syria, warned in a statement that some 2.2 million people will be affected from the closure of the humanitarian lifeline that secures food provided by the World Food Program.

Other organizations and around 2.65 million people will be deprived of clean or drinking water, it added.

The Syria Response Team said this catastrophe looms as the mandate of UN Resolution 2642 approaches an end while international agencies insist to legitimize the entry of humanitarian aid through crossings of the Syrian regime.

Last month, local and international humanitarian organizations have called on the UN Security Council to renew and extend the Syria cross-border resolution 2642 for at least 12 months to allow humanitarian aid into northwest Syria through the Bab al-Hawa crossing.

The resolution will be put to a vote on January 10.

The Syria Response Team warned Monday that the closure of Bab al-Hawa crossing will interrupt bread support in more than 725 camps, and deprive more than a million people from obtaining bread on a daily basis.

At the medical level, the Team said that “stopping the entry of aid across the borders will reduce the number of hospitals and effective medical facilities to less than half in the first stage, and more than 80 percent will be closed in the second stage.”

It noted that starting 2023, eight medical facilities have already seen reduced or no aid while less than 20 percent of facilities in the camp are receiving medical support.

Also, humanitarian organizations are unable to provide support to repair damages within the camps, the Team said, noting also the increase in the birth rate, and the arrival of new displaced people.

Meanwhile, medical authorities in NW Syria spoke of a new crisis with the interruption of support for dozens of hospitals and medical facilities, and the near depletion of operational materials in a number of other hospitals that provide multiple medical services to more than two million civilians, most of whom are displaced people residing in camps.

The medical authorities said a number of hospitals already stopped providing medical services to civilians suffering from heart, respiratory and orthopedic diseases starting the first day of 2023. They named the Atma Charitable Hospital, HIH Hospital for Children, Armanaz Hospital, and Al-Quds Hospital north of Idlib.

Ahmed al-Hassan, director of Syria's Al Khair camp, which houses about 800 displaced families north of Idlib, said “a horrible catastrophe may affect millions of people residing in the area, unless the mechanism for entering international humanitarian aid is renewed as soon as possible.”

He also spoke about a possible famine among the displaced, and the spread of epidemics and diseases.

More than 2.5 million displaced people from different regions of Syria are unemployed and have no source of income to survive, al-Hassan said.

He stressed that most of the displaced families in the camps depend on the monthly baskets provided by international partner organizations of the UN and WPF.



Gaza Residents Stricken with ‘Abject Fear’ as Strikes Resume, Says UN

A view of the United Nations Security Council during a meeting on Gaza and the Middle East, at UN headquarters in New York City on March 18, 2025. (AFP)
A view of the United Nations Security Council during a meeting on Gaza and the Middle East, at UN headquarters in New York City on March 18, 2025. (AFP)
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Gaza Residents Stricken with ‘Abject Fear’ as Strikes Resume, Says UN

A view of the United Nations Security Council during a meeting on Gaza and the Middle East, at UN headquarters in New York City on March 18, 2025. (AFP)
A view of the United Nations Security Council during a meeting on Gaza and the Middle East, at UN headquarters in New York City on March 18, 2025. (AFP)

Residents of Gaza have been plunged into "abject fear" once again, a top UN humanitarian director said Tuesday, after intense Israeli strikes resumed on the Palestinian territory.  

"Overnight our worst fears materialized. Airstrikes resumed across the entire Gaza Strip," Tom Fletcher, head of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, told the UN Security Council in a video meeting.  

"Unconfirmed reports of hundreds of people killed... and once again, the people of Gaza living in abject fear."

The council meeting was called -- prior to the air strikes -- by several member states to discuss the humanitarian situation as Israel has blocked aid into Gaza Strip since March 2.

"This total blockade of life-saving aid, basic commodities and commercial goods will have a disastrous impact on the people of Gaza who remain dependent on steady flow of assistance," Fletcher said.  

"As Gaza is cut off -- again -- our ability to deliver assistance and basic services is becoming harder."  

He said that during the recent ceasefire, before the new blockade, 4,000 aid trucks entered the territory each week, reaching more than two million people, and more than 113,000 tents were distributed.  

"This proves what's possible when we're allowed to do our job," he added.  

"We cannot and must not accept our return to pre-ceasefire conditions or the complete denial of humanitarian relief."  

With the exception of the United States, almost all members of the Security Council expressed concern or condemned the new Israeli strikes, with Algeria accusing Israel of "completely disregarding" the ceasefire.  

Riyad Mansour, the Palestinian UN ambassador, said that Palestinians are once again being "killed indiscriminately".

He called on the UN’s highest body to act on their condemnations.

"This can never be justified and must stop immediately. I agree with you, Madame President, when you said that you have a responsibility to act," Mansour said to Christina Markus Lassen, the Danish ambassador who is leading the council this month.  

"You are the Security Council. Act. Stop this criminal action. Stop them from denying our people food in the month of Ramadan. You have resolutions. Act. You have power. Act."

He added, "Or as my friend, the ambassador of Slovenia said, you will become irrelevant."

The world is witnessing "another chapter of collective punishment, collective punishment being afflicted upon the people of Gaza," said Algerian ambassador Amar Bendjama.  

"Once again, Palestinian blood is being used as a tool for the political calculations of the Israeli politicians," he said.  

Acting US ambassador Dorothy Shea pushed back against accusations that the Israeli army was carrying out "indiscriminate attacks," asserting instead that it was "striking Hamas positions."  

"The blame for the resumption of hostilities lies solely with Hamas," she said, after the group "steadfastly refused every proposal and deadline they've been presented over the past few weeks."  

US President Donald Trump "has made clear that Hamas must release the hostages immediately or pay a high price, and we support Israel in its next steps," she said.