A senior
U.N. official warns Syrian civilians will starve to death unless the United
States and Russia pressure the Syrian government and armed opposition to allow
humanitarian aid to reach hundreds of thousands of people trapped in besieged
and hard-to-reach areas.
The special
advisor to the U.N. Special Envoy for Syria, Jan Egeland, says people already
are dying. In recent days, he says five people in the besieged Syrian cities of
Medaya and Kefraya have died because the United Nations has been unable to
evacuate them to receive urgent medical treatment.
He says
people in the two towns as well as in the towns of Foah and Zabadani are
particularly at risk of dying from starvation because they have not received
food for many months. But, he says conditions in other besieged and
hard-to-reach areas also are grim and getting worse.
Although the
situation was not great before, he says it was better when the United States
and Russia, co-chairs of the Humanitarian Access Task Force for Syria worked
together in pushing for humanitarian access.
“We were great when there was co-leadership by
the United States and Russia last year. We have not seen that of late," he
said. "We have not had as much progress of late. I think that can come
back. I am convinced it will come back.”
The
Humanitarian Task Force was born one year ago this week because people in
besieged areas in Syria were starving to death. Egeland says the aim was to
have Russia, the United States and other members of influence pressure the
warring parties to gain access to these areas.
He says the
results have been mixed and the first two months of this year have been an
enormous disappointment.
“We have, so
far, this year not reached a single besieged area with land convoys, in spite
of infinite number of attempts to reach the remaining 13 besieged areas with
more than 600,000 civilians,” he said.
Egeland says
U.N. relief convoys are lined up and ready to leave for the besieged town of
al-Weir on Friday. If the mission is successful, he says it would be an
important sign of good will in the days leading up to next week’s expected
resumption of political negotiations on Syria.
(VOANews)
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