Kuwait's emir pledged on
Wednesday $500 million for Syrians stricken by almost three years of civil war.
Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmed al-Sabah made the pledge at an international donor conference in Kuwait city attended by U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.
Delegates from 69 nations and
24 international organizations attended the one-day event chaired by U.N. chief
Ban Ki-moon.
In a speech, Ban revealed
shocking statistics. He said half of the Syrian population is now in need of
urgent humanitarian assistance and that 40 percent of Syria’s hospitals are no
longer functional.
The U.N. is looking for $2.3
billion to support 9.3 million people inside Syria and $4.2 billion for Syrian
refugees, expected to nearly double to 4.1 million by year's end. The U.N. has
described the $6.5 billion Syria appeal as the largest ever in its history for
a single humanitarian emergency.
Non-government charity organizations meeting in Kuwait on Tuesday pledged $400 million for Syrians, with Kuwait promising $142 million of the total.
U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry arrived in Kuwait Tuesday following talks in Paris and Rome aimed at
preparing the so-called January 22 "Geneva II" peace talks.
An official speaking to
reporters travelling with Kerry said Washington had "given more than $1.3
billion to date, of which 700 million has been inside Syria."
According to aid agencies,
10.5 million Syrians are food insecure, more than a million children under five
suffer from acute or severe malnutrition, about half the population has no
access to adequate water sources or sanitation and 8.6 million have
insufficient access to healthcare.
Lebanon is currently home to
the largest number of refugees with 905,000, followed by Jordan with 575,000,
Turkey 562,000, Iraq 216,000 and Egypt 145,000.
By the end of 2014, these
numbers are estimated to rise to 1.65 million in Lebanon, 800,000 in Jordan,
1.0 million in Turkey, 400,000 in Iraq and 250,000 in Egypt.
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