WASHINGTON – The US State Department today announced it was sending US$756 million (RM3.4 billion) in new humanitarian aid to Syria, where need remains “dire” after more than a decade of war.
The funds, which are in addition to a tranche of US$808 million announced earlier this year, will go to “continue our unwavering support for the Syrian people,” State Secretary Antony Blinken said in a statement.
He added that the US ambassador to the United Nations (UN), Linda Thomas-Greenfield, had made the announcement earlier in the day at a UN Security Council meeting on Syria.
Blinken stressed the importance of an international agreement allowing the delivery of humanitarian aid across the border, calling it a “lifeline” for millions of Syrians.
“Cross-border deliveries ensure that life-saving aid including food, medicine, and other relief supplies reach people throughout northwest Syria, who rely on this aid to survive,” Blinken said in the statement.
In July, the council adopted a resolution extending a system for cross-border aid to Syria by six months, the duration demanded by Russia. Other members had sought a full year.
The aid delivery system across Turkey’s border into rebel-held Syria – in place since 2014 – is the only way UN assistance can reach civilians without navigating areas controlled by Syrian government forces.
In total, Washington says it has supplied about US$15.7 billion in humanitarian aid for Syria since the war began 11 years ago. – AFP, September 15, 2022
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