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File photo: Syrian fighters leave Zabadani last year. AP/Press Association Images

UN warns of 'looming humanitarian catastrophe' in four Syrian towns

The UN’s last humanitarian access to the four towns was in November.

THE TOP UN official in Damascus has warned of a “looming humanitarian catastrophe” in four besieged towns in Syria, calling for immediate access to deliver aid to some 60,000 residents.

In a statement today, the UN humanitarian coordinator for Syria, Ali al-Za’atari, warned of dire conditions in the towns of Zabadani, Madaya, Fua and Kafraya.

Zabadani and Madaya, in Damascus province, are besieged by government troops and their allies, while Fua and Kafraya are under siege by the rebels.

“Sixty thousand innocent people are trapped there in a cycle of daily violence and deprivation, where malnutrition and lack of proper medical care prevail,” the statement said.

“The situation is a looming humanitarian catastrophe. The principle of free access to people in need must be implemented now and without repeated requests,” it added.

Za’atari said the situation was complicated by the “tit-for-tat arrangement” between the towns, whereby no aid can be provided to Madaya and Zabadani without similar access to Fua and Kafraya, and vice versa.

The linkage “makes humanitarian access prone to painstaking negotiations that are not based on humanitarian principles,” he said.

“This has prevented medical cases from receiving proper treatment and evacuation. People are in need, and they cannot wait any longer. We need to act now.”

The UN’s last humanitarian access to the four towns was in November, the statement said, without directing blame for the lack of access at one side or the other.

Earlier this month, the UN said it had been able to deliver aid to just 40,000 people in besieged and hard-to-reach areas in January, despite requesting access to more than 900,000 people.

That made January the worst month for humanitarian deliveries in nearly a year, with approval received for just one of 21 humanitarian convoys proposed by the UN, the International Committee of the Red Cross and the Syrian Arab Red Crescent.

The UN says 4.72 million Syrians are in so-called hard-to-reach areas, including 600,000 people under siege, mostly by the Syrian army, but also by rebel groups or the Islamic State group.

© AFP 2017

Read: This photo of an assassination is the controversial winner of the World Press Photo award

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    Mute Mike Cantwell
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    Feb 14th 2017, 7:54 AM

    Where are your neighbours when you need them ? , Quatar , Saudia Arabia etc fellow Muslims

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    Mute John003
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    Feb 14th 2017, 8:03 AM

    Sunni neighbours are busy shipping advanced US weapons to the moderste repels as John Kerry called them….Keeping the civil war going….Hopefully Trump will stop this insane Obama policy….

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    Mute Stephen Coveney
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    Feb 14th 2017, 10:49 AM

    Or john we could applaud Russia for propping up a regime that hangs 20000 of its own people while also torturing thousands more. Not to mention indiscriminately bombing civilians

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    Mute John003
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    Feb 14th 2017, 11:22 AM

    That is exactly what John McCain said in 2009 when he went to Syria and said Assad must be overthrown by the freedom fighters….Since then a US armed Saudi funded Sunni civil war …..As is the case with all civil wars lots of atrocities on all sides……Milions of referguees….I think the moderate Sunni jahadi like Al Nusra and IS would be worse that Assad…

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    Mute Anton Friendo
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    Feb 14th 2017, 7:53 AM

    I have every bit of faith in Angelina Jolie and Lindsay Lohan to fix all of this.

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    Mute Charlie Wrex
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    Feb 14th 2017, 8:32 AM

    Over 400,000 dead, with many multiples of this injured amd displaced. I think the humanitarian catastrophe arrived a few years ago.

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    Mute Tony Canning
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    Feb 14th 2017, 1:55 PM

    @Charlie Wrex: Estimates were around 250K dead up until around September of 2015 – which is when Russia stepped in.

    Proof of systematic repeated bombing of hospitals by Russia and Assad forces yet still there are some who will regard Russia as saviours.

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    Mute TheJeff
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    Feb 14th 2017, 9:45 AM

    The traditional solution to this problem is to Surrender !… try it !.. peace

    If UN Angelina Jolie and aid agency’s where around in 1943 the Germans would still be holding out in Stalingrad, thanks to UN food drops & clever media work & Heidi the cute 7 year old on twitter/Instagram who seems to have get brilliant coverage broadband despite a million soviets troops surrounding “her” city

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