Syrian regime blocking aid deliveries: Local sources


(MENAFN- The Journal Of Turkish Weekly) >The Assad regime is violating the humanitarian aspect of Syria’s cessation-of-hostilities agreement by blocking the delivery of humanitarian aid to besieged areas.

Since the agreement came into effect late last month humanitarian assistance -- dispatched by the UN -- has been successfully delivered to Muaddamiyah Zabadani and Eastern Ghouta in Damascus along with Fua and Qafraya in Idlib province.

The cease-fire agreement which is supported by both Washington and Moscow came into effect on Feb. 27 with the understanding that humanitarian assistance would be allowed into to civilian areas.

Humanitarian aid however has yet to reach the Yarmouk refugee camp along with Darayya Jayrud Ruhaybah Kanaker Tadamun and Hajar al-Aswad -- all located near capital Damascus.

On Tuesday trucks laden with aid are expected to reach Homs where regime forces have previously blocked humanitarian convoys according to local sources.

On March 17 Jan Egeland an advisor to the UN’s special envoy to Syria said the world body had still not received permission from the regime to enter six out of 18 besieged areas.

According to local sources the northern city of Rastan in Homs province has gone without aid for the past seven months which they said had led to severe bread shortages.

In the town of Houla in northern Homs meanwhile the humanitarian situation has steadily deteriorated. While basic foodstuffs (sugar rice eggs etc.) can be purchased at extremely high prices oil and wheat have all but disappeared from the market.

Stealing aid

Some local sources say that humanitarian assistance is being stolen in some cases while also warning of an acute shortage of medical equipment.

According to Hossam Madayi a member of a local committee in Madaya (a town in the Rif Damashq province) regime forces had pilfered humanitarian aid that had been sent to the town.

On March 3 UN spokesman Farhan Haq complained that the Syrian regime had consistently blocked the delivery of aid to certain parts of the war-torn country.

According to the UN World Food Programme roughly 485000 people in 18 besieged areas of Syria -- the most notable of which is Madaya -- face rapidly deteriorating conditions due to the lack of humanitarian assistance.

Those 18 besieged areas are: Madaya Muaddamiyah Eastern Ghouta the Yarmouk refugee camp Zabadani Jayrud Kanakir Tadamun Hajar al-Aswad and Darayya (all in Damascus); Talbiseh Rastan Houla and Vaer (in Homs); Fua and Qafraya (in Idlib); and the center of Deir al-Zour province.


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