NEW YORK — With a scorching summer fast approaching, food prices rising and access to water and electricity limited in many parts of Syria, donors must make good on $4.3 billion in humanitarian pledges committed at last week’s Brussels funding conference, the UN’s senior humanitarian official told the Security Council on Friday.
Martin Griffiths, Humanitarian Affairs chief and Emergency Relief Coordinator, thanked donors for their contributions — totaling nearly $6.7 billion — which includes $2.4 billion earmarked for 2023 and beyond.
However, he noted that the pledges for 2022 amount to less than half of the UN’s $10.5 billion funding requirement.
“This is the largest appeal ever for the Syria crisis, because we have the largest-ever number of people in need,” he said, referring to the dollar figure he has previously referred to as an “eye-watering amount of money.”
Food, water, electricity
The UN relief chief cited a recent warning by the World Food Program (WFP) that further cuts to its program could materialize in the coming months, driven by the global rise in food prices and stagnant funding levels.
WFP has been forced to progressively reduce the size of the monthly food ration across Syria. According to its recent news release, a 13-percent ration cut is now looming in the country’s northwest, where people will start receiving food rations that translate to 1,177 kilocalories — just over half of the recommended daily intake.
Meanwhile, Griffiths cautioned the Security Council that water levels in the Euphrates River, on which some 5.5 million people in Syria depend, are dropping to a critically low point, putting both drinking water access and electricity supplies at risk.
“Without electricity, irrigation pumps cannot function, hospitals and other critical services cannot be supported, and residents must purchase drinking water, further eroding their purchasing power,” he said.
Cross-border aid
Reporting on UN efforts to expand crossline humanitarian deliveries from inside Syria to parts of the country most in need, Griffiths said four such convoys have reached their destination in 2022, with the fourth reaching some 40,000 people in the country’s northwest on May 16.
Another crossline mission is now being planned to reach Ras Al Ayn, in the northeast, to deliver COVID-19 vaccines, early childhood vaccines and leishmaniosis medication.
However, he stressed the operations cannot currently replace the size or scope of the massive cross-border operation still flowing through a single border point, whose reauthorization the Council will consider in the coming weeks.
Tensions on this matter have run high in the Security Council in past years, with members ultimately voting to slash three of the four authorized crossing points.
The last authorized point, the Bab Al-Hawa crossing on the Turkish border, was last reauthorized in July 2021.
‘Obligation to help’
Also briefing the Council was Farida Almouslem of the Syrian American Medical Society, who shared her experience working as an obstetrician-gynecologist in Aleppo, urging the Council to reauthorize the crucial cross-border aid program.
“I witnessed hundreds of atrocities which are still stuck in my mind,” she said, recalling a tearful plea from a woman begging for help getting pregnant again after losing her four children to a barrel bomb.
Her hospital was repeatedly targeted by air strikes, cluster munitions, barrel bombs and “bunker-buster” bombs, including some containing chlorine gas.
“Syrians throughout the country are suffering, and every one of us has an obligation to help,” she stressed, noting that more humanitarian funds are needed to prevent further hospital closures, provide critical nutrition assistance and increase the capacity of Syria’s health system.
More resources must also be committed to provide quality mental health services throughout Syria, she said, citing increased rates of suicide, domestic and gender-based violence and substance abuse. — UN News