(Reuters) - U.N. Security Council members are considering a draft resolution to authorize cross-border aid deliveries into Syria
at four points without government consent, diplomats said on Thursday,
after an earlier council demand for greater access was ignored. The 15-member Security Council
achieved rare unity in unanimously approving a resolution in February
that demanded rapid, safe and unhindered aid access in Syria, where a three-year civil war has killed more than 150,000 people. But
deputy U.N. aid chief Kyung-wha Kang told the council on Thursday that
the resolution had failed to make a difference. About 9.3 million people
in Syria need help and 2.5 million have fled, according to the United Nations. Council members Australia,
Luxembourg and Jordan have drafted a stronger follow-up resolution that
U.N. diplomats, speaking on condition of anonymity, said would
authorize deliveries into Syria at specific points from Turkey, Iraq and Jordan to reach millions of Syrians in opposition-held areas. "Ninety
percent of the aid goes to government held areas, it's not getting to
Syrians in zones which are controlled by the opposition," Australian
U.N. Ambassador Gary Quinlan told reporters after Kang's briefing. The
resolution would threaten "measures" in the event of non-compliance,
diplomats said. The draft has been circulated to the permanent five
veto-wielding council members - the United States, Britain, France, Russia and China. Negotiations are due to take place among the eight members in the coming days. The
draft text is under Chapter 7, diplomats said, which would make it
legally binding and enforceable with military action or other coercive
measures such as economic sanctions. The February resolution was
binding, but not enforceable. Russia,
supported by China, has previously vetoed four resolutions threatening
any action against its ally, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. It
blocked a council bid to refer the situation in Syria to the
International Criminal Court for possible prosecution of war crimes. Moscow has previously made clear it was against allowing cross-border access without the consent of Syria's government. The United Nations says it can only deliver aid into Syria without the government's approval under a Chapter 7 resolution. Diplomats
said the draft resolution would likely be circulated to the remaining
seven council members early next week ahead of a possible vote in early
June. Russia assumes the rotating presidency of the Security Council for
June. In a report last week,
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon demanded the Security Council take
urgent action to ensure humanitarian aid reaches more Syrians. "All
delivery routes must be made available to us – both cross-line and
cross-border," Kang told the council, according to a statement after the
closed-door briefing on Ban's report. "Bureaucratic
obstructions on the delivery of assistance must stop. We don't have the
time for arbitrary restrictions on how and to whom we are allowed to
deliver aid," she said. (Reporting by Michelle Nichols; Editing by Grant McCool)
U.N. council mulls authorizing cross-border Syria aid access

Zaman Alwasl
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