MARCH 30, 20214:07 AM UPDATED A
DAY AGO
U.N. raises $6.4 billion for Syrians as humanitarian needs soar
By Robin Emmott
4 MIN READ
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - International
donors pledged $6.4 billion in humanitarian aid on Tuesday to help Syrians
fleeing a decade of civil war, but short of a $10 billion goal as governments
struggle with weakened economies in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic.
In the fifth annual conference held to keep Syrians from starvation, the event
hosted by the European Union sought $4.2 billion for people displaced inside
Syria and $5.8 billion for refugees and their hosts elsewhere in the
Middle East.
The United Nations had raised more than
$7 billion in 2020 and 2019, although U.N. officials will still press for more
pledges throughout this year and have time, as the money is split between 2021
and 2022.
Financial institutions and donors have
also agreed low-interest loans worth $7 billion, said Janez Lenarcic, the EU
Commissioner for Crisis Management.
Some 24 million people need basic aid in
Syria and the surrounding region, a rise of 4 million over the past year. It is
also the highest number yet since a crackdown on pro-democracy protesters by
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in 2011 led to a devastating civil war.
“Things are getting worse,” U.N. aid
chief Mark Lowcock said via video link. “We’ve had a decade of death,
destruction, displacement, disease, dread and despair,” he said, adding that
the United Nations was organising its biggest-ever response plan for Syria and
the region to save thousands of lives.
PLEDGES
Germany pledged 1.738 billion euros
($2.04 billion), its largest amount in four years. The EU’s support, which
comes from its common budget and is separate from member states, was steady at
560 million euros.
Other pledges came in throughout the day
including $100 million from Qatar and almost $600 million from the United
States.
FILE PHOTO: A Syrian refugee boy stands in front of a tent at an informal
tented settlement in the Bekaa valley, Lebanon March 12, 2021. REUTERS/Mohamed
Azakir
Britain pledged 205 million pounds
($281.16 million), although David Miliband, president of the International
Rescue Committee, said the amount was lower than the 300 million pounds pledged
last year, urging London to provide more.
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken
called late on Monday for Syria’s borders to be kept open to allow unhindered
access and the free flow of aid, a call echoed by EU foreign policy chief Josep
Borrell.
“It’s vital that assistance can reach
those in need...It’s of vital importance for humanitarian help being able to be
brought to these people,” Borrell said.
Fighting has subsided since a deal a
year ago ended a Russian-led bombing campaign that had displaced over a million
people. But Russian air strikes, along with Iranian and Syrian-backed
militaries, continue to target rebel outposts.
The Red Cross Red Crescent Movement
urged international donors to help rebuild Syria, particularly to repair
critical health, water and electricity services.
International Committee of the Red Cross
head Peter Maurer urged world powers to reach a peace deal or face many more
annual donor conferences for Syria. “The ultimate responsibility lies with
parties to the conflict,” he said.
With Russian and Iranian help, Assad has
retaken much of the territory lost to rebels, and U.N.-backed peacemaking
efforts have stalled.
The EU has said there can be no
foreign-assisted reconstruction in Syria without a peace deal between the Assad
government and myriad rebel and other opposition groups.
($1 = 0.8532 euros)
($1 = 0.7291 pounds)
Reporting by Robin Emmott; Additional reporting by Stephanie Nebehay in
Geneva and Madeline Chambers in Berlin; Editing by Lisa Shumaker
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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