Syria crisis: UN launches record US$6.5bn aid appeal
The UN has launched its biggest ever appeal for humanitarian aid after exhausting funds raised to help Syria this year, and said nearly three-quarters of the country's population will need help in 2014.
The UN has launched its biggest ever appeal for humanitarian aid after exhausting funds raised to help Syria this year, and said nearly three-quarters of the country's population will need help in 2014.

(BBC): The United Nations has announced its biggest ever appeal, seeking US$6.5bn (£4bn; 4.7bn euros) for humanitarian aid to Syria.

Winter storm "Alexa" has brought freezing temperatures to Syria and neighbouring countries
Winter storm “Alexa” has brought freezing temperatures to Syria and neighbouring countries

The UN estimates nearly three-quarters of Syria’s 22.4 million population will need humanitarian aid in 2014.
The appeal coincides with a new study by the International Rescue Committee, which warns that starvation is now threatening the Syrian population.
Bread prices have risen by 500% in some areas, according to the report.
Four out of five Syrians said their greatest worry was that food would run out, the survey found.

‘TERRIFYING SITUATION’

In total, the UN is asking for almost US$13bn to fund its humanitarian operations next year.
Some US$2.3bn are destined for civilians inside Syria, while US$4.2bn would go to Syrian refugees in neighbouring countries.
The latest call exceeds the UN’s record appeal for US$4.4bn in June, of which only 60% has been funded so far.
“We’re facing a terrifying situation here where, by the end of 2014, substantially more of the population of Syria could be displaced or in need of humanitarian help than not,” Mr Guterres said.
“This goes beyond anything we have seen in many, many years, and makes the need for a political solution all the much greater.”
Ahead of the launch, UN humanitarian chief Valerie Amos described the Syrian situation as “one of the biggest crises in modern times”.
She said Syrian refugees “think the world has forgotten about them”.

UN humanitarian envoy Baroness Amos:  "They say to me 'why has the world abandoned us?'”
UN humanitarian envoy Baroness Amos: “They say to me ‘why has the world abandoned us?’”

The UN estimates that some 6.3 million people have been internally displaced since the conflict broke out in March 2011.
More than two million Syrians have fled to neighbouring countries, including Lebanon and Turkey.
The UN is becoming impatient with some richer states for not helping its efforts, the BBC’s Imogen Foulkes reports.
UN officials will be pressing Syria’s neighbours Saudi Arabia and Qatar, which have apparently not offered the UN any money, our correspondent adds.
Nearly half of those who have remained in Syria now rely on aid, according to the UN.
Circumstances have worsened further with the onset of harsh winter weather.
International aid agencies say they have been struggling to provide medical aid to the sick and wounded because of fierce fighting between the forces of President Bashar al-Assad and the rebels.
IRC President David Miliband said the his organisation’s latest survey showed “that starvation is now threatening large parts of the Syrian population”.
He called the Syrian conflict “the defining humanitarian crisis of this century so far”.
“In a situation where civilians are targeted by snipers or bombs, where doctors are targeted because they’ve treated the ‘wrong’ side, and where aid workers are unable to cross conflict lines because the norms of war are not being followed and international humanitarian law is being broken, then obviously nothing is ever enough,” he told the BBC.
Syrian Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad yesterday reaffirmed that “there will be more access and more co-operation” with the UN in the delivery of assistance.
More than 100,000 people are estimated to have been killed since the unrest began more than two years ago.

SHARE THIS ARTICLE :
Facebook
Twitter
WhatsApp
All our printed editions are available online
emblem3
Subscribe to the Guyana Chronicle.
Sign up to receive news and updates.
We respect your privacy.