(Reuters) - The United Nations
World Food Programme (WFP) has declared itself "extremely concerned" by
photographs showing its food parcels being handed out in Syria with Islamic State logos on them. Images circulating on social media show food being distributed from cardboard boxes with "Islamic State in Syria" labels pasted over the WFP logo. Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL, rules over millions of people in Syria and Iraq, and keeping the public fed is part of its effort to portray its "caliphate" as a genuine government. To
get food and medicine to areas ruled by Islamic State, the U.N. says it
relies on partner humanitarian organizations such as the Syrian Arab
Red Crescent (SARC), which told Reuters on Tuesday that it negotiates
access with Islamic State but distributes all aid itself. “WFP condemns this manipulation of desperately needed food aid inside Syria,”
said Muhannad Hadi, WFP Emergency Regional Coordinator, in a statement
late on Monday. The agency was trying to confirm the authenticity of
those images, it said. The
photographs seemed to have been taken in Deir Hafr village, about 50 km
from Aleppo, where WFP last August delivered enough food to feed 8,500
people for a month. Vivian
Tou’meh, head of communications for the Syrian Arab Red Crescent, said
her group negotiates access with all parties in the war, including
Islamic State, when delivering aid, but Red Crescent volunteers deliver
all parcels themselves. “Yes, there is coordination with all parties on the ground … We negotiate for access, we always do this," she said. WFP
said that in September Islamic State raided Red Crescent warehouses
where food rations may have been stored. Tou’meh said she was unable to
confirm the raid but would check. Jitka
Škovránková, who works for the Czech People in Need, one of the few aid
groups working in contested Aleppo city, said that her organization
decided to stop working in Islamic State territory in mid 2014 after the
militants tried to control aid and set conditions on aid groups. "There
is too much pressure. They want to influence the aid delivery," she
said, adding that Islamic State became more controlling after a U.S.-led
coalition started bombing in July. "(Islamic
State) said: 'you are international so you shouldn’t be here,'" she
said. "We used to negotiate access with them. They had a much less
extremist approach. They did not have the strength. They said: 'we are
good soldiers, we are good Muslims.'” People in Need still works in several areas controlled by other militants in Syria, including al Qaeda's official wing, the Nusra Front. “We
are working in areas under the control of Jabhat al-Nusra. It is fine.
They forbid English in schools. That’s the only thing we don’t like,"
Škovránková said. She
said insurgent groups have pressured her aid organization to donate
relief, including one incident when militants came with arms to demand
aid but were convinced to leave by aid workers. "We have never been
forced to give it."
WFP alarmed by pictures of ISIS logos on its Syria food parcels

Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.