‘Time is working against us’, UN chief says, calling for action to end clashes, restore credible Israeli-Palestinian political horizon

“Our immediate priority must be to prevent further escalation, reduce tensions, and restore calm,” UN Secretary-General António Guterres said at a meeting of the Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People.

Against a backdrop of deadly accelerating surges of violence, “sky high” tensions, and a stalled peace process, the Secretary-General said the situation is at its “most combustible in years”.

“The outlines of the solution are clear; they are laid out in UN resolutions, international law, and bilateral agreements,” he said. What is needed is the political will and courage to make the difficult choices for lasting peace to end the occupation and realize the two-State solution.

Deadly cycles of violence

However, while pursuing these goals, he said “trends on the ground mean time is working against us”.

“The longer we go without meaningful political negotiations, the further these goals slip from the reach,” he said.

With 2022 being the deadliest year since the UN began tracking fatalities in 2005, he said the violence continues in 2023, radiating across the region and beyond. News reports on Wednesday said an Israeli security force operation in Nablus left 10 Palestinians dead and more than 80 injured. Meanwhile, the situation in Jerusalem is becoming ever more fragile.

“The position of the United Nations is clear,” he said. “The status of Jerusalem cannot be altered by unilateral actions.”

Hopelessness spreading

Yet, across the occupied West Bank and Gaza, hopelessness is spreading, feeding anger and despair, he said. Attacks persist alongside Israeli settlement expansion in occupied territory.

Each new settlement is another roadblock on the path to peace,” he said, emphasizing that all settlement activity is illegal under international law, and “it must stop”.

End acts of retaliation

Deeply concerned by Israel’s recent punitive measures against the Palestinian Authority following the UN General Assembly’s resolution seeking an International Court of Justice advisory opinion on the occupation, he said such actions pose grave risks.

“There should be no retaliation with respect to the Palestinian Authority in relation to the International Court of Justice,” he said. “These measures risk further destabilizing the Palestinian Authority at a time when it is already struggling with a dire fiscal crisis that is undermining its ability to provide services to people.”

Critical action areas

Drawing attention to efforts to help Palestinians, he urged all donors to honour commitments and ensure sustained support for the “critical mission” of the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA).

Equally critical is easing the movement of goods and people in and out of Gaza, he said, calling for a full lifting of the debilitating closures in line with UN Security Council resolutions.

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Amid ‘ominous’ surge in Israeli-Palestinian violence, top UN officials call on parties to swiftly reduce tensions — Global Issues

“We are witnessing a surge in violence, including some of the deadliest incidents in nearly 20 years,” said Tor Wennesland, Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process (UNSCO). “We have seen ominous signs of what awaits if we fail to address the current instability.”

Raising concerns that developments on the ground are continuing along a negative trajectory, gaining in both pace and intensity, he said unilateral actions are moving the parties still further apart, worsening tensions, and driving the conflict. To date, 2023 has seen a record number of deaths.

Deadly developments

Since his previous Council briefing in January, he said 40 Palestinians and 10 Israelis have been killed.

“I am particularly appalled that children continue to be the victims of violence and involved in violent incidents,” he said. “Children must never be the targets of violence, used, or put in harm’s way.”

A significant number of Palestinian casualties have occurred in the context of Israeli security forces search and arrest operations and clashes with armed Palestinians, including in the West Bank.

‘Recipe’ for progress

“Immediate efforts are required to reduce tensions, but restoring calm is not, on its own, a recipe for progress,” he cautioned, emphasizing that the UN, along with regional and international partners, are engaging intensively with all parties to de-escalate the situation.

Responsible leadership is urgently needed to avoid unilateral moves, take concrete steps to counter negative trends, and strengthen the Palestinian Authority in the near term, he said.

In this regard, he called on the parties to match security efforts with political steps that can halt the current trajectory of violence and restore hope in an end to the conflict and prospects for a viable two-State solution.

As Ramadan and Passover are coinciding in April, he said efforts are needed to ensure peace during these Muslim and Jewish religious holiday periods.

Preventing more violence is an urgent priority, which requires not only coordinated security measures, but also considerable political efforts,” he said, urging both sides to avoid taking any unilateral steps that could further inflame the situation.

‘Brink of despair’

During the Council’s open briefing, the Deputy Commissioner-General of the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), Leni Stenseth, said a growing number of Palestinians are standing on “the brink of despair.”

Already deteriorating conditions have been exacerbated by such global crises as the COVID-19 pandemic and rising food prices, pushing many into poverty.

“We can almost anticipate that the coming weeks will bring more violence in the West Bank,” she said, echoing calls to reduce tensions. “This cycle of violence must end before it’s too late.”

© UNICEF/Eyad El Baba

Palestinian children look out from their house window at destroyed buildings in their neighbourhood in the Gaza City.

Clashes in refugee camps

Current conditions have left the Agency’s efforts vulnerable, interrupting such critical services as health centres. Noting that UNRWA schools are usually the only safe havens for those fleeing the violence, she called on parties to respect the Agency’s role in providing live-saving assistance.

“Urban spaces within and around densely populated refugee camps should not be venues for clashes with automatic weapons and tear gas,” she said.

In Gaza, years of conflict have isolated the population from the rest of the world, she said. Nearly all of Gaza residents rely on UNRWA for food assistance, and about half of children in schools exhibit signs of trauma.

Palestine refugeesfeel abandoned by the international community,” she said, noting that UNRWA and its programmes remain one of the few pillars of stability.

Pointing out that the Agency’s 2022 income was the same as in 2013, she said needs are exponentially greater and growing.

“The status quo is no longer sustainable,” she said. Avoiding UNRWA’s implosion is a collective interest, given that the Agency’s contribution to peace and security is “enormously” cost-effective.

There can be no peace or security in the region without the fulfillment of the rights of all,” she said, calling the Council to give Palestinian refugees hope by redoubling efforts to find a solution and to ensure UNRWA can continue to deliver on its mandate.

Council calls for restraint

At the outset of the meeting, the Council adopted its first presidential statement of 2023, condemning all acts of violence against civilians and strongly underscored the need for Israeli and Palestinian parties to meet their international obligations and commitments.

In the presidential statement, the Council strongly opposed all unilateral measures that impede peace, including, inter alia, Israeli construction and expansion of settlements, confiscation of Palestinians’ land, and the “legalization” of settlement outposts. The 15-member organ also called on all parties to observe calm and restraint.

International Court of Justice

Following reports of 2022 being the most deadly year in the conflict, the UN General Assembly on 30 December adopted a resolution that requested the International Court of Justice issue an advisory opinion relating to the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territory.

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Three border crossings now operational for earthquake aid delivery — Global Issues

Ten trucks transporting shelter and other items from the International Organization for Migration (IOM) crossed into northern Aleppo through the Al-Ra’ee border crossing earlier that day, said Stéphane Dujarric, Spokesperson for the UN Secretary-General, at a press conference in New York. 

“This is the first UN convoy through this border crossing since the Government of Syria agreed to its use for aid deliveries, which now brings us to three fully operating border crossings for the United Nations,” he said. 

More trucks expected 

Additionally, the World Food Programme (WFP) sent 20 trucks into Idlib province via the Bab al-Hawa crossing. Overall, the agency has delivered food to 127,000 people in northwest Syria since the earthquake struck on 6 February. 

The UN has now dispatched 227 trucks to non-Government held areas in the region since cross-border operations resumed three days later. 

“Preparations are underway to send more trucks through all three border crossings,” Mr. Dujarric said.  

“At the same time, we and our partners continue to scale up operations in other parts of Syria. Aid in the impacted areas remains a top priority, as thousands of people remain in collective shelters across Latakia, Homs, Hama and Aleppo.” 

Safe returns home 

The UN refugee agency, UNHCR; the UN Development Programme (UNDP) and UN-Habitat, the Organization’s urban development agency, are helping to conduct assessments of structural damage to buildings, he added. 

The exercise will help to determine whether families can return to homes that are deemed safe.  Longer-term options are being explored for families who cannot return to damaged structures. 

Food and other aid are being distributed to families, including those who have returned to their homes. 

Support for Türkiye 

Meanwhile, the UN continues to support the coordination of search and rescue operations in Türkiye. The Organization and partners are delivering food, tents, blankets, and other supplies, with medical items and personnel being dispatched to impacted areas.  

The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has reached nearly 218,000 people, including more than 132,000 children, with such items as hygiene kits, winter clothes, electric heaters and jerry cans. 

The UN Population Fund (UNFPA) also reported that roughly 326,000 pregnant women, who urgently need access to reproductive health services, are among the earthquake survivors. 

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Aid convoys will keep crossing into Syria ‘for as long as needs are there’ — Global Issues

Since 9 February, 143 trucks have passed through the Bab al-Hawa and Bab al-Salam border crossings, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA). “The movements continue today, they continue over the weekend and will continue every day for as long as the needs are there,” OCHA spokesperson Jens Laerke told journalists in Geneva.

Asked about earthquake damage to roads leading to the aid corridors, the OCHA spokesperson referred to information that “all the roads through all the crossing points are passable and you can drive there…I was myself at Bab al-Hawa a few days ago and the trucks were indeed rolling across”.

Amid massive devastation in both Türkiye and Syria after the double quake strike on 6 February, relief workers continue to stress that the full extent of disaster is still unfolding. Echoing that message, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) warned on Thursday that earthquake damage in Syria threatens “immediate and longer-term food security” in Syria.

In Türkiye, it’s estimated that more than 15 million people have been affected, while in Syria, 8.8 million have been impacted. Humanitarian assistance is urgently needed, as relief teams have seen first-hand in Aleppo, particularly after more than a decade of war.

Cracks in buildings – and people

“I was quite overwhelmed by not only the magnitude of the destruction but the loss that was inflicted on families, you know, during only 60 seconds,” said Fabrizio Carboni, International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) Regional Director for the Near and Middle East.

“For the first time I saw that there was not only a crack, and cracks in the buildings, but for the first time I really saw that our colleagues, the people you talked to in Syria, they were really wounded, and something is broken.”

Aid blocked from Damascus

Speaking to journalists in Geneva, the ICRC official also issued a strong appeal for crossline aid deliveries from Damascus to be allowed through to the largely opposition-held northwest: “We tried to get into Idlib through crossline and so far we’ve been blocked, unfortunately. So, I don’t have first-hand information on the roads and access but we’re ready to get in but we are so far blocked to do crossline, hoping that this could change soon.”

© UNOCHA

Families displaced by the earthquake are temporarily being accommodated in tents in Aziz, Syria.

Hot meals, family rations

As part of the UN-wide response, the World Food Programme (WFP) reported on Thursday that it has stepped up its emergency response to nearly half a million quake-affected people in Türkiye and Syria, providing hot meals, emergency ready-to-eat food packages and family food rations.

“Families tell me they left everything behind when the earthquake hit, running for their lives. WFP’s food is a lifeline for them; while they think about their next steps in the destruction left by the earthquake, their children can eat,” said Corinne Fleischer, WFP Regional Director for the Middle East, North Africa and East Europe.

She added: “We have scaled up rapidly and requests for more food are coming every day from municipalities and communities. We are there for them, but WFP can’t do it alone. We urgently appeal for funding to help us reach those in need.”

Averting a health disaster

Needs remain massive but the international response is gaining momentum, both in Türkiye and Syria, confirmed Caroline Holt, global director for operations at The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC):

“In Türkiye, we’re very much supporting with the Turkish Red Crescent on the ground to support with shelter needs, with food, with wash, with health and also with cash.”

In Syria, the IFRC is working with the Syrian Arab Red Crescent to support people with basic needs and household items, including health, psychosocial support and clean water. With cholera already present in Syria, access to safe water “is absolutely critical to avoid that second potential disaster, that second health disaster unfolding”, Ms. Holt said.

UN-led flash appeals for both countries have been issued this week – a $1 billion request for Türkiye to help 5.2 million people for three months and a $397 million humanitarian appeal for nearly five million people in Syria – jumpstarted by a $50 million funding injection from the UN’s Central Emergency Response Fund.

Farming communities badly hit, too

Highlighting the need for sustained assistance in the region, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) stressed that more help was needed for farming communities impacted by the crisis.

They are still reeling from the disaster, not least those who have opened their homes to survivors from nearby towns and cities.

Urgent needs include assessing the extent of damage to agriculture and food supply chains, including irrigation systems, roads, markets and storage capacity.

Food security threat long-term

In Syria, worrying early indications suggest major disruption to crop and livestock production capacity which threaten “immediate and longer-term food security”, FAO said.

“This includes damage and loss to livestock, agricultural equipment and infrastructure such as greenhouses, irrigation, storage facilities, as well as food and feed production facilities, among others.”

To support and help rural communities reinstate basic food production, FAO noted that its priority activities included supplying animal feed, seed, seedlings, fertilizer, fuel, tools, equipment, livestock vaccination and unconditional cash transfers for one to three months.

Job support in Türkiye

In Türkiye, FAO has supported displaced and host community families affected by the earthquakes too, with a focus on supporting jobs. The FAO Syria Refugee Resilience Plan aims to support 250,000 people with $71.8 million in funding.

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Syrian women hope earthquake tragedy opens up possibility for peace — Global Issues

Ahead of a briefing to journalists in New York on Wednesday, Laila Baker, UNFPA Regional Director for Arab States, spoke to UN News from Aleppo, where women are clamouring for peace amid the rubble of the disaster and the ravages of war. 

“Without fault, in every group of women, individual or collective, their message was the same: We’ve had enough. We are exhausted, and we want reconciliation. We want peace. And we hope that during this very dark moment, that it’ll be a moment where everyone’s hearts and minds are open to the possibilities of peace,” she said. 

Immense humanitarian needs 

The death toll from the double earthquakes that struck Syria and neighbouring Türkiye continues to rise and has surpassed 41,000, according to media reports.   

Close to nine million people in Syria alone have been impacted, UN humanitarian affairs office, OCHA, reported, and damage is worse in the northwest – the last opposition stronghold – where needs were already at a record high in nearly 12 years of conflict. 

More than 4,700 buildings have been destroyed, entire streets have been demolished, and 4.2 million people in Aleppo, and another three million in Idlib, have been affected. 

UNFPA is the UN’s reproductive and sexual health agency and Ms. Baker has been visiting its clinics in the city, as well as makeshift shelters, and talking to partners and emergency response personnel. 

While the level and scale of the devastation is impossible to comprehend, the damage goes much deeper. 

Collapsed buildings, dashed hopes 

“It’s not just the physical destruction that is compounded by over a decade of conflict and war,” she said. 

“It’s the cumulative exhaustion of a people who have been fighting for their vital existence and now feel that the very moment that they’re starting to return to some normalcy and see hope and light at the end of the tunnel, the natural disaster, this massive earthquake, has literally crumbled their hopes the way that the buildings have crumbled during the earthquake itself.” 

Women and girls comprise the majority of people now in shelters in north and northwest Syria, or who have been displaced. 

Prior to the earthquake, UNFPA and partners were running several initiatives to provide safe birth delivery and maternal health services, as well as protection from gender-based violence. 

Dignity amid destruction  

“Those have had to scale up massively,” said Ms. Baker, adding that services have also been integrated and expanded to makeshift shelters, mosques, schools and even parks, where conditions are less than ideal. 

“I say ‘shelter’, but I use the term loosely. None of these makeshift shelters are equipped for human residents. They lack water. They lack good sanitation, electricity, heating. It was cold, it was dark in some places, but we are trying with our partners on the ground to provide vital services.” 

UNFPA has distributed “dignity kits” to nearly 40,000 women and families in Aleppo alone, providing them with basic hygiene products and other personal care items that help instill a sense of normalcy. 

The agency is also working with partners to supply medical equipment to the two hospitals there that are still functioning.   

‘Peace for health’ 

The ongoing war has left the Syrian healthcare system in tatters.  Just half of all health facilities were operational prior to the earthquake, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). 

Senior WHO officials were in the country this past weekend, including agency chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus and Dr. Michael Ryan, Executive Director of its Health Emergencies Programme. 

“I saw the destruction of entire communities, the unspeakable suffering and the determination of survivors and responders,” said Tedros, speaking on Wednesday during his regular media briefing from Geneva. 

WHO is providing care to survivors, from psycho-social needs to medicines, he said, though noting that “the task of saving lives is only just beginning.” 

“We need peace for health,” Dr. Ryan added. “From a humanitarian perspective, the scale-up is moving forward. However, our support will depend on the conditions” on the ground.

Massive response operation 

The support provided by WHO and UNFPA is part of the wider relief and rescue efforts mounted by the international community in the face of the colossal catastrophe in Syria and Turkiye. 

For example, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) helped provide micronutrient supplements for 113,000 under-fives and 1,000 pregnant and lactating women for three months, the UN reported on Wednesday. 

Meanwhile, the World Food Programme (WFP) has been distributing ready-to-eat meals and other food items to displaced families.   

“We are working hand-in-hand with the rest of the United Nations team here on the ground to ensure better coordination amongst ourselves so that the most needy get the quickest service,” said Ms. Baker.  

“It is a massive operation and beyond compare and nothing that one single agency, or one single country, can possibly cope with.”  

A step towards reconciliation? 

This week, humanitarians welcomed the Syrian Government’s decision to open two additional crossings on the border with Türkiye so that aid can be delivered into the northwest. 

The earthquake struck on 6 February and convoys initially were entering via Baba Al-Hawa, the only remaining border crossing authorized under a UN Security Council resolution adopted nine years ago. 

As of Wednesday, 117 trucks have now passed through the crossing and another, Bab al-Salam, with 30 making the journey that day alone. 

The move by Syria will have “a very positive impact” on aid operations, said Ms. Baker, who thanked nations that have temporarily lifted sanctions against Damascus as well as the Turkish Government for its collaboration. 

“I think that this is a very key note about how reconciliation can begin. Finally, we have a point where everyone converges on the need to help those who need our help. And it is unbiased, it is blind to anything except for the humanitarian assistance,” she said. 

Duty to personnel 

UNFPA plans to deliver more dignity kits and hospital equipment to the region and will strengthen personnel and coordination on the ground, “because there’s a sense of duty of care to our providers as well.” 

Even though agency staff also have been traumatized by the earthquake, they continue to work tirelessly each day, she reported.  Some have even been sleeping in their cars, moving from one location to the next once they have finished their tasks. 

Urgent response continues 

The UN this week launched a nearly $400 million appeal for Syria, and a similar appeal for Türkiye is being finalized. 

Efforts are being rapidly scaled up and more assessments are being planned in Syria to identify priority needs in different areas, said UN Spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric, speaking in New York on Wednesday.

He added that the UN and humanitarian partners in the Inter-Agency Standing Committee have declared a systemwide scale-up for six months. 

“This helps to ensure that we are collectively and operationally deploying all possible means and resources to urgently respond in the earthquake-impacted areas,” said Mr. Dujarric. 

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Guterres calls on countries to fully fund $379 million quake appeal for Syria — Global Issues

António Guterres told reporters outside the Security Council in New York that aid “must get through from all sides” and the funding would cover an initial period of three months.

He said a similar appeal is being finalised for survivors across the border in Türkiye.

‘Immense’ need

In the immediate aftermath of the earthquakes, the United Nations rapidly provided $50 million through the Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF), but the needs are immense”, he said.

“The Syria effort brings together the entire UN system and humanitarian partners and will help secure desperately needed, life-saving relief for nearly 5 million Syrians – including shelter, healthcare, food and protection.”

He said providing the relief was the most effective way for countries to help the war-shattered country, which is still in the grip of a 12-year civil war, with much of the quake zone in the northwest border region, controlled by opposition fighters, with many living there displaced multiple times and already in a state of humanitarian crisis.

“We all know that lifesaving aid has not been getting in at the speed and scale needed”, the UN chief said, with millions of people “struggling for survival, homeless and in freezing temperatures.”

‘Doing all we can’

We are doing all we can to change this but much more is needed” he declared. 

“I have an urgent message to the international community: the human suffering from this epic natural disaster should not be made even worse by manmade obstacles – access, funding, supplies.

Aid must get through from all sides, to all sides, through all routes – without any restrictions”, he emphasized, noting that following Syria’s assurances last night, two extra crossings were now open to allow more aid into the northwest.

“As we speak, an 11-truck convoy is on the move to cross through Bab Al-Salam  with many more to come”, he said.

Time for ‘concerted action’ 

He called on all Member States, and others in the donor community, “to fully fund this effort without delay and help the millions of children, women and men whose lives have been upended by this generational disaster.

“This is a moment for unity, for common humanity and concerted action.

No restrictions

Asked if a Security Council resolution was needed to cement the bilateral agreement between the United Nations and Syrian authorities, Mr. Guterres said the reality was that the crossings were open, and movement was taking place.

Replying to another question about having to negotiate with military opposition leaders in the northwest beyond the control of Syrian authorities, he repeated his call for all aid corridors to be opened, “without restrictions”.

© UNHCR/Hameed Maarouf

Families shelter at a mosque in the Al-Midan district of Aleppo, Syria, which has been turned into a collective shelter.

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Children sleep in streets, too afraid to go home after quake disaster — Global Issues

“Even without verified numbers it’s tragically clear the number of children killed, the number of children orphaned is going to keep on rising”,” said UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) spokesperson James Elder.

In Türkiye, the total number of children living in the 10 provinces before the emergency was 4.6 million, and 2.5 million in Syria.

Growing health threat

And as the humanitarian focus shifts from rescue to recovery, eight days since the disaster, Mr. Elder warned that cases of hypothermia and respiratory infections were rising among youngsters, as he appealed for continued solidarity with all those affected by the emergency.

“Everyone, everywhere, needs more support, more safe water, more warmth, more shelter, more fuel, more medicines, more funding,” he said. “Families with children are sleeping in streets, malls, mosques, schools, under bridges, staying out in the open for fear of returning to their homes.”

Crossline access challenge

Despite the welcome reports that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad agreed with the UN to reopen two additional cross-border aid delivery points into quake-hit northwest Syria from Türkiye at Bab Al-Salam and Al Ra’ee for an initial three months, UN humanitarians stressed the need to secure aid relief safe passage guarantees from all those involved in Syria’s more than 12-year-old civil war.

“Every party has to agree to receive convoys to let them go unhindered and that is the biggest challenge,” said Christian Lindmeier, spokesperson for the World Health Organization (WHO).

People need help, ‘wherever they are from’

Echoing that message from Damascus, Kenn Crossley, World Food Programme (WFP) Country Director in Syria, told journalists in Geneva that humanitarian access needed to reach people “wherever they are from, wherever we can get to them”.

Highlighting the UN’s considerable efforts to provide relief to those directly affected by the emergency, the WFP official noted that hot meals and ready-to-eat food had been distributed in shelters within hours of the disaster, using pre-positioned stocks.

“Roughly 90,000 people within northwest Syria have been receiving specific food assistance related directly to the impact of the earthquake,” he said, adding that up to double that number were receiving regular assistance linked to the ongoing conflict.

Aid for all

WFP has also provided food assistance to 60-70,000 quake-affected people in Government-controlled areas of Aleppo, Hama, Latakia, Mr. Crossley continued, which is in addition to the assistance that the UN agency provides “in unfortunately exactly the same areas through our regular programmes”.

Another key player in the relief effort, the UN migration agency, IOM, said that 11 trucks packed with aid relief had been dispatched on Tuesday to northwest Syria’s Bab Al-Salam, one of the reopened border crossings, while another four lorries left the UN’s aid hub in Gaziantep bound for Bab al-Hawa.

© UNHCR/Hameed Maarouf

The Al-Kallasah neighbourhood of Aleppo, Syria, was severely affected by the February 6th earthquake.

Convoy latest

The latest convoys are in addition to the 58 trucks loaded with aid provided by six UN agencies that reached northwest Syria from Turkiye as of 13 February, according to aid coordinating agency OCHA.

In its latest situation report for Turkiye, WHO Regional Director for Europe, Dr. Hans Kluge said that well over 31,000 people had lost their lives in the disaster. The number of injured in the 10 affected southern provinces had risen to almost 100,000. 

Across the border in northwest Syria, Dr. Kluge assessed the death toll at nearly 5,000 but “all of these figures will likely rise”, he told journalists.

Rising by the hour

“The needs are huge, increasing by the hour. Some 26 million people across both countries need humanitarian assistance,” the WHO official insisted.

As part of its response, the UN health agency has supported efforts to prevent emerging health issues linked to the cold weather, hygiene and sanitation, and the spread of infectious diseases.   

In Türkiye, an estimated one million people have lost their homes and are living in temporary shelters, Dr Klug continued, citing Turkish authorities’ estimates that 80,000 people are in hospital, “placing a huge strain on the health system, itself badly damaged by the disaster”. 

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UN chief welcomes Syria decision to open aid corridors — Global Issues

Only a single crossing point – Bab al-Hawa – has been open to humanitarians since the 6 February earthquakes struck across the border region of southern Türkiye and northwest Syria, which has been in the grip of civil war for the past 12 years, and is the last remaining region partly under the control of opposition forces.

“I welcome the decision today by President Bashar al-Assad of Syria to open the two crossing points of Bab Al-Salam and Al Ra’ee from Türkiye to northwest Syria for an initial period of three months to allow for the timely delivery of humanitarian aid”, António Guterres said in a statement.

As hope fades of bringing more survivors out alive from the ruins, in Syria, more than 4,300 deaths had been reported in the northwest on Sunday. Deaths in Türkiye have reportedly now exceeded 31,000.

‘Utmost urgency’

It’s clear that “delivering food, health, nutrition, protection, shelter, winter supplies and other life-saving supplies to all the millions of people affected is of the utmost urgency”, added Mr. Guterres.

“Opening these crossing points – along with facilitating humanitarian access, accelerating visa approvals and easing travel between hubs”, he added, “will allow more aid to go in, faster.”

Lifting gear, medicines needed

Humanitarians working to save lives in Syria and Türkiye made an urgent appeal on Monday for more heavy machinery to remove rubble and debris in towns and villages shattered by last week’s earthquakes, together with medical supplies.

That includes ambulances and medicine, shelter and non-food items, including heating, emergency food supplies and so-called WASH assistance – water, sanitation and hygiene, the UN Spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric told correspondents in New York at the regular daily briefing.

UN aid coordination agency OCHA said that Harim, Afrin and Jebel Saman are the worst-affected districts in northwest Syria, and that more than 50 trucks loaded with aid from five UN agencies have so far arrived via the sole international crossing at Bab al-Hawa, from Türkiye.

UN continuing to mobilize

“The UN continues to mobilize emergency teams and relief operations”, Mr. Dujarric stressed.  

At Türkiye’s request, a UN Disaster Assessment and Coordination(UNDAC) Team with a total of 50 members has been deployed to the aid hub of Gaziantep and to three other hubs in the affected area to support the coordination of the International Urban Search and Rescue Operations, he added.

An UNDAC liaison team to Türkiye’s Disaster and Emergency Management Ministry, who are leading the response, has also been established in Ankara.  

Speaking from there to UN News on Monday, UNDAC’s Winston Chang said that the scale and the damage sustained inside the disaster area in the south of the country was “one of the worst we have seen.”

6,000 high rise buildings now rubble

“We are looking at a damage area of over 50,000 square kilometers, covering a span of ten provinces…We count now, 6,000 collapsed, high rise buildings”.

He said there were still reports coming in, eight days after the deadly earthquakes struck Türkiye and Syria, of “miracle rescues”, including a newborn baby who was still attached to the umbilical cord, pulled from the rubble.

“We have 25 different disaster groups fighting across all sectors from environmental, medical, the military, of course, disaster response coordination”, he added, noting that at the Turkish national emergency centre, there was a strong sense of unity, and mission to aid those in need.

As for the horrific scale of the disaster, he said that compared to the Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004, where 220,000 were killed, “I think this one does not pale in comparison.”

UN disaster relief teams in Syria

A separate UNDAC team composed of seven members reached Syria and is supporting the response in Aleppo, Latakia and Homs, said Mr. Dujarric. Currently, eight international rescue teams are working in the earthquake impacted areas in Syria.

“The UN is working to rapidly scale up its assistance, including through the cross-border aid operations into the northwest”, he added, before news of President Assad’s decision had been announced.

On Monday afternoon in New York, the Security Council held a private meeting, reportedly to discuss the speeding up of aid to stricken areas of northwest Syria.

On Monday, six trucks carrying food and non-food items from the World Food Programme (WFP) crossed through Bab al-Hawa crossing, the UN Spokesperson said.

“Since 9 February, a total of 58 trucks loaded with essential humanitarian assistance crossed into the northwest Syria from southern Türkiye.”

Relief chief in Damascus

UN Emergency Relief Coordinator Martin Griffiths was in the stricken quake region over the weekend surveying the huge challenges of the aid operation and on Monday, arrived in Damascus.

Earlier in the day he was in Aleppo and spoke to families who have lost loved ones and their homes, Mr. Dujarric said.

“He also met first responders and aid workers who have worked tirelessly to meet urgent humanitarian needs. 

“He said the trauma of the people he spoke to in Aleppo was visible – and this is a trauma which the world needs to help heal. Mr. Griffiths said our obligation is to ensure shelter, food, schooling, psychosocial care, and a sense of the future for people affected by the devastating earthquake.” 

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WHO announces $43 million appeal to scale up response in Syria and Turkiye — Global Issues

The amount is set to increase as the magnitude of the disaster becomes clearer, he said, speaking during a press conference from the Syrian capital, Damascus.

Latest reports put the death toll at more than 33,000, according to international media, with millions more left homeless.

Ramping up operations

Tedros also reported that the Syrian authorities appear open to allowing more border crossings to deliver humanitarian aid into the northwest.

War-ravaged Syria is divided into areas under the control of the Government, opposition forces and armed groups.  

WHO is working across all areas affected by the earthquake, which struck on Monday.  

The UN agency is also scaling up operations across the country, including in the northwest, where the impact is even worse. 

More than 4,300 deaths and 7,600 injuries have been reported there, according to the UN humanitarian affairs office, OCHA .

Prior to the earthquake, 4.1 million people were already depending on humanitarian aid, and needs were at an all-time high.

Recent developments welcomed 

Tedros stressed the need to take response “to the next level” to reach all populations who require support.

He welcomed the decision by the United States to ease sanctions against Syria in the wake of the tragedy.

“We equally appreciate the recent blanket approval by the Government of the Syrian Arab Republic for the UN for cross-line convoys, as well as measures to increase cross-border access. We hope this continues,” he said.

The WHO chief reported that he had met with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad earlier on Sunday afternoon “who indicated he was open to considering additional cross-border access points for this emergency.” 

Ready to move

Tedros said he is waiting to move across conflict lines to northwest Syria.

“We’re on stand-by actually,” he told journalists.  “We can move anytime now through the coastline to the northwest.  Based on the blanket permit, we have already permission from this side. We’re waiting now to hear from the other side. As soon as we get that we will cross to the northwest.”

After the earthquake struck, WHO immediately accessed its pre-positioned supplies in the northwest and Aleppo, thus making treatment of major injuries possible. Staff also began distributing supplies to health facilities.

WHO

WHO is sending medical supplies to Syria to boost the humanitarian response.

Responding to needs

Tedros arrived in Syria on Saturday, where WHO and partners have so far distributed 110 tonnes of medical supplies to affected areas across the country. 

A flight is scheduled to arrive in Damascus on Sunday night with vital specialized emergency health supplies for frontline workers.  

The UN agency also is supporting surge capacity of frontline specialized medical teams.

Cascading crises

The earthquake is the latest crisis to hit Syria, following the ongoing conflict, the COVID-19 pandemic, cholera outbreaks, and economic decline.

Twelve years of war have “pulverized” the healthcare system, said Dr. Michael Ryan, WHO Emergencies Director.   Prior to the earthquake, just 50 per cent of health facilities were functioning, but the true impact is much greater.

“Not only physical damage to the infrastructure itself but the exodus of health workers, the loss of salaries, loss of training,” he said.  “It’s just that death by a thousand cuts to the system.”

‘An unfolding tragedy’

The WHO chief expressed deep respect and admiration for the survivors, first responders and health workers, though pointing to the immense needs they face.

National and international organizations, but also neighbours, mosques, churches and community groups, have been racing to deliver everything from food, clean water and medical care, to a safe space for people to sleep.

Tedros was in Aleppo on Saturday and visited a WHO-supported mobile health clinic distributing medicines to people with conditions such as headaches, anxiety and difficulty sleeping

“WHO and other organizations have trained community workers to offer rapid mental health support, but much more is needed,” he said.

While in the city, Tedros met a young girl called Nour, who lost her parents and suffered a broken arm when their six-storey apartment building collapsed, noting that she “is just one example of an unfolding tragedy that is affecting millions”.

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UN Emergency Relief Coordinator Martin Griffiths visits the Turkish side of Bab Al-Hawa, the single remaining border-crossing authorized by the Security Council for UN aid delivery to north-west Syria

Cross-border aid 

The UN’s top humanitarian official continues his mission in the region, OCHA reported on Sunday.

Emergency Relief Coordinator Martin Griffiths travelled to the Turkish side of Baba Al-Hawa, the only remaining border crossing for UN aid delivery into northwest Syria authorized by the Security Council.

Mr. Griffiths also visited a UN hub in Hatay, where he witnessed the transshipment and monitoring of 10 trucks loaded with aid provided by the International Organization for Migration (IOM) prior to setting off to Syria. 

This was the fourth UN cross-border aid convoy since the earthquake struck northern Türkiye on Monday, affecting people on both sides of the border. 

The first convoy, with six trucks, crossed into Syria on Thursday following a three-day temporary disruption from damaged key roads. 

A second convoy of 14 IOM trucks crossed on Friday, followed by a third the next day comprised of 22 trucks containing medicines, cholera test kits, blankets, hygiene kits  solar lamps and other relief items.

OCHA said aftershocks are reportedly continuing in northwest Syria, forcing people to keep fleeing their homes. 

Civil defense teams concluded search and rescue operations on Saturday and have moved onto removing debris and recovering bodies, however efforts are being hampered by fuel shortages and a lack of machinery and vehicles.

‘Put politics aside’: UN Envoy

Meanwhile, the UN Special Envoy for Syria, Geir Pedersen, arrived in Damascus on Sunday on a pre-planned visit.

He affirmed that humanitarians will do all they can to access everyone who needs help, and underlined his efforts to rally support.

“We are reaching out of course to bilateral countries, we are mobilizing funding and we’re trying to tell everyone put politics aside. This is a time to unite behind a common effort to support the Syrian people,” he said.

Mr. Pedersen also stressed the need for crossline and cross-border access.  “I’m in close touch with the UN humanitarian family, we’re working together to try to mobilize this support and that of course is my key message during this visit to Syria.”
 

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UN relief chief meets families affected by devastating earthquake — Global Issues

Mr. Griffiths was speaking in the Turkish city of Kahramanmaraş, where recovery efforts are ongoing in frigid temperatures.

He met with families left homeless by the disaster and listened to their stories of shock and devastation. 

“I am here to make sure that these people also are not forgotten,” he said.

Hope for survivors

The UN relief chief also spoke with search and rescue teams as they carried out their operations in the devastated central parts of the city, amid collapsed buildings with excavation equipment digging through the debris.

UN teams are already on the ground, and more than 130 countries have dispatched responders, sniffer dogs, experts and other personnel.

“There has never been an international response, a Turkish response, to a natural disaster, as we see here in these terrible days,” said Mr. Griffiths.

He praised the courage of people, including parents, who are working round the clock in efforts to rescue their families and children from the rubble – “hoping for one more sound, for one more person to survive.”

Humanitarian support

It is estimated that more than 20,000 people have died in the double earthquake, which struck southeastern Türkiye and northern Syria early on Monday morning. 

Millions more have been left homeless, including Syrians displaced by the 12-year war in their homeland and thousands of refugees who have fled across the border.

For Mr. Griffiths, the next phase will be to look after those affected by the tragedy.

“And I’ve met some of them already today,” he said, “people who’ve lost their homes, whose children don’t have schools to go to, who have no food, who have no money, who depend on the generosity of the Turkish people, the Turkish government and the international community.”

Mr. Griffiths is expected to visit the UN-authorised cross-border operation to Syria in the south of Türkiye on Sunday before travelling there.

The UN and partners will also launch appeals for the two countries.

In a video on his Twitter, Mr. Griffiths said “I hope what we will see is the same kind of generous, immediate and urgent international response to humanitarian needs that we have seen to those organizations helping the people of these cities to rescue the living from the dead.” 

Heartbreaking conditions

Meanwhile, the head of the World Health Organization (WHO), Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, arrived in Aleppo, Syria, on Saturday.

“I’m heartbroken to see the conditions survivors are facing – freezing weather and extremely limited access to shelter, food, water, heat and medical care,” he wrote in a post on his official Twitter account.

In a separate tweet, Tedros recounted how he met two babies, Nour and Omar, who lost their parents in the earthquake. 

“There are no words to express the pain they are going through. Grateful to colleagues and partners who are providing them with needed care, comfort and love,” he wrote.
 

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