You are here

UN warns of 'bloodbath' risk in northwest Syria

By AFP - Feb 24,2020 - Last updated at Feb 24,2020

Children walk through the entrance of an underground shelter where several families of internally displaced Syrians from Aleppo and Idlib provinces are taking refuge, in the village of Taltunah about 15 kilometres northwest of Idlib in the northwestern Idlib province, on Sunday (AFP photo)

GENEVA — Fighting in northwest Syria is coming "dangerously close" to encampments with around a million displaced people, risking an imminent "bloodbath", the UN said on Monday.

Mark Cutts, the UN's deputy regional humanitarian coordinator for the Syria crisis, also said the UN was trying to double aid deliveries across a border crossing from Turkey from 50 to 100 trucks a day.

"The fighting is now coming dangerously close to an area where more than a million are living in tents and makeshift shelters," Cutts told reporters in Geneva.

Cutts warned there was a risk of "a real bloodbath".

As a result of the escalation, Cutts said the UN was revising up its funding appeal for the crisis from $330 million to $500 million (462 million euros), adding that there was a shortfall of about $370 million.

The UN sent 1,200 aid trucks into the area in January and has dispatched 700 more so far in February, Cutts said.

"The reality is it is simply not enough. We're barely able to meet the needs of the people for the most urgent food rations and tents and blankets and winter items," he said.

Cutts also said aid workers were "overwhelmed", some warehouses had been looted and the fighting had damaged some 77 hospitals and other medical facilities.

 

up
76 users have voted.


Newsletter

Get top stories and blog posts emailed to you each day.

PDF