Amman/Jordan, 8 August, 2023 – The failure of the United Nations’ Security Council to renew the cross-border resolution safeguarding access to vital humanitarian aid for north-western Syria is inexcusable. People living in this area lost a vital way to receive aid in an impartial and effective manner.
“The resolution expired a month ago and there is no solution currently in sight. This is simply deplorable,” says Sebastien Gay, MSF Head of Mission for Syria.
The cross-border resolution for years enabled UN agencies and their international and national partners to provide humanitarian aid to northwest Syria through the Bab al-Hawa border crossing in an impartial manner, exempting them from negotiations with bordering Syrian and Turkish authorities.
More than four million people live in this part of Syria and have endured years of suffering as a result of a long, violent conflict, with 2.9 million of them are internally displaced people struggling to find a shelter and have access to clean water, food and healthcare. The devastating earthquake that struck northwest Syria on 6 February this year has exposed the already-dire humanitarian situation and exacerbated the medical and humanitarian needs. Six months after the devastating earthquakes in Syria, many Syrians are still living with the consequences of the earthquakes, as a high number of people are displaced and struggling with inadequate shelter and insufficient access to essential resources. The non-renewal impedes the continuity of aid and unavoidably contributes to reinforcing the isolation of northwest Syria amid swelling humanitarian and medical needs by adding more constraints. We fear that agencies and organizations looking to support these vulnerable communities will face additional challenges in providing aid and accessing communities in northwest Syria in an isolated environment.
In addition, the non-renewal of the cross-border mechanism hampers the emergency preparedness of international and national organizations and groups and inhibits the implementation of humanitarian activities and longer-term and sustainable projects, as funding is linked to this mechanism.
“MSF has an established presence in northwest Syria and we will find ways to keep our activities and the level of our support undiminished, but we are extremely worried about the consequences of this situation for access to life-saving aid for the population at large, since many other agencies and organizations may not have the same capability and may be more affected by the end of the cross-border resolution than we are likely to be”, says Sebastien Gay.
Humanitarian access to Syria must be efficient, safe, consistent and protected from politicization, and the cross-border mechanism is an essential component of it.
MSF urges the member countries of the UN Security Council to find a solution with the utmost urgency that guarantees impartial, non-politicized and sustainable humanitarian access. Abandoning northwest Syria to itself would be unconscionable.