DANA (AP) – United Nations (UN) humanitarian officials sounded an alarm yesterday over a humanitarian crisis in rebel-held northwestern Syria, warning that intense shelling by government forces displaced almost 70,000 people in recent weeks.
The Syrian government pounded the country’s northwest this month, especially after a drone attack targeted a military college graduation ceremony in the heart of Homs.
At least 89 officers and civilians were killed, making it one of the deadliest attack in the war town nation in years.
Humanitarian agencies and human rights organizations have reported strikes hitting hospitals, schools, and other civilian infrastructure as Syria endures the 13th year of a conflict that has killed a half-million people.
“We’re at the most significant escalation of hostilities since 2019,” UN Deputy Regional Humanitarian Coordinator for Syria David Carden said after meeting with displaced Syrians living in temporary shelters “What they want above all is to return home to their homes, but right now they do not feel safe to do so.”
The vast majority of the 4.5 million people living in Idlib and northern Aleppo provinces rely on humanitarian aid to survive, and almost half live in displacement camps. Northwestern Syria is controlled by the al-Qaeda-linked Hayat Tahrir al-Sham in Idlib province and by Turkish-backed groups in northern Aleppo province.
Shrinking budgets due to donor fatigue have humanitarian organisations struggling to respond to the growing needs in the impoverished enclave undergoing daily attacks.
Carden and other UN officials toured the encampments where millions of Syrians are staying.
He was accompanied by senior operations coordinator the UN refugee agency UNHCR Oliver Smith and head Rosa Crestani of the World Health Organization (WHO) office in Gaziantep, Turkiye.
Crestani said WHO received 23 reports of strikes impacting health facilities, while others shut down fearing they would be hit, too.