UN chief says aid to Syria's Idlib vital as border crossing authorisation set to lapse
Cross-border humanitarian aid to Syria remains vital, the United Nations Secretary-General said in an internal report on Tuesday, as a UN authorisation allowing aid into rebel-held areas in the country's northwest without approval from Damascus is set to expire.
A rare moment of cooperation between the United States and Russia in July allowed for a six-month extension of activity at Bab Al-Hawa, the only border crossing through which aid reaches the rebel stronghold of Idlib province. That authorisation is due to expire on 10 January.
"Cross-border assistance remains lifesaving for millions of people in need in north-west Syria," Antonio Guterres said in a confidential document obtained by AFP, adding that over four million people were in need of crucial assistance across the country.
The United States and several European nations believe the UN authorisation for the crossing between Syria and Turkey should renew automatically for an additional six months, without the need for a new vote.
But Russia, a key ally to the Damascus regime, has previously opposed the move, invoking Syrian sovereignty.
Moscow has linked any potential extension to Tuesday's report, as well as a possible new vote.
The cross-border mechanism has been operating since 2020 through Bab Al-Hawa, after the Russian-imposed removal in 2019 of three other access points in Syria.
In Tuesday's document, the UN chief refers to another project for humanitarian operations, this time across the front lines, to reach Idlib.
"If implemented, this plan will make operations across the front lines more predictable and effective," Guterres noted.
However, he insisted upon the importance of the Bab Al-Hawa crossing.
Olive pickers are risking death to work the fields of Idlib's Jabal Al-Zawiya region in Syria, an area under constant bombardment from the Assad regime.
— The New Arab (@The_NewArab) November 12, 2021
We meet some of the labourers to understand what's driving their desperation for work: https://t.co/sphSeiaRqz
"At this point such cross-line convoys, even if deployed regularly, could not replicate the size and scope of the cross-border operation," he said.
Guterres said some 4.5 million people in Syria need help this winter, up 12 percent from the previous year, because of the economic crisis and the global pandemic.
Only 2.9 percent of the Syrian population is fully vaccinated, according to the report.
More than three million people live in Idlib province, much of which is controlled by jihadists and allied rebels.
In June, the UN said around 2.4 million people there were in need of humanitarian aid.