The people of Syria
feel "increasingly abandoned by the world" as global attention focuses
on Islamic State militants, while violence and government bureaucracy
hinder attempts to deliver aid to 12 million people, U.N. chief Ban
Ki-moon said on Monday. In his 13th monthly report to the United Nations Security Council on Syria,
Ban said a lack of accountability during the four-year civil war has
also led to a rise in allegations of war crimes, crimes against humanity
and other human rights abuses. "While
global attention is focused on the threat to regional and international
peace and security which terrorist groups such as ISIL (Islamic State)
and (al Qaeda's) Nusra Front pose, our focus must continue to be on how
best to help and support the Syrian people," Ban said in the report,
seen by Reuters. Ban said
more than 220,000 people have been killed since security forces cracked
down on a pro-democracy movement in 2011, sparking an armed uprising.
Some four million Syrians have fled the country and 7.6 million are
internally displaced. Extremist
Islamist groups have exploited the chaos and complicated diplomatic
efforts to end the conflict with Islamic State, declaring a caliphate in
the swaths of territory it has seized in Syria and Iraq. A U.S.-led alliance has been targeting Islamic State with air strikes in Iraq and Syria for some six months. Ban
said delivery of aid was becoming more challenging due to "violence and
insecurity, shifting conflict lines, deliberate interference by parties
to the conflict ... and administrative procedures which constrain
effective aid delivery." While
aid is reaching several million people, Ban said the situation for some
4.8 million people in hard-to-reach areas, especially 212,000 people in
besieged areas, was of "grave concern," hospitals and schools are being
attacked, and international aid funding has failed to keep pace with
needs. The United Nations
is seeking some $8.4 billion to meet the humanitarian needs of the
Syrian conflict in 2015, after only securing about half the funding it
asked for in 2014. Ban said a pledging conference in Kuwait on March 31
would be crucial. He said U.N. cross-border aid deliveries of food rations from Turkey
and Jordan had reached more than four times as many people - some
771,000 - in the three months to end-February compared with the previous
three months. However,
access to medical supplies and equipment "continued to be restricted by
insecurity and constraints imposed on humanitarian operations by parties
to the conflict." Ban
said many delivery requests were going unanswered by the government and
surgical supplies were also being removed from convoys by security
forces. (Reuters)
Syrian people feel abandoned as world focuses on Islamic State: U.N.
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