Photo: Nasser Nouri/Flickr. Foreign military action could cause further displacement (file photo)
Source: IRIN
ANTAKYA/DUBAI, 2 September 2013 (IRIN) - Aid agencies responding to the
Syrian crisis are updating contingency plans and pre-positioning stocks,
warning that any US-led military action against Syria could lead to an
increase in humanitarian needs.
“It’s already a complex situation with profound humanitarian
consequences,” said humanitarian coordinator Yacoub El Hillo, the
highest ranking UN humanitarian official in Syria. “If you’re talking
about five million people displaced internally and two million people
who are now refugees in neighbouring countries; if you have one million
refugee children who are now away from their homes and their schools,
this is already a dramatic situation. So imagine if this is to be
compounded by a military strike? It will only add to the suffering,” he
told IRIN, citing possible displacement of civilians, increased exposure
to risk, and reduction in service delivery.
“Disruption to life is likely to happen and this will produce a lot of
difficulties for civilians, which means more challenges for the
humanitarian community to cope [with] and to deliver under these very
constrained circumstances.”
On 31 August, US President Barack Obama announced he would seek approval
from Congress to take military action against Syrian targets, as
punishment for an alleged chemical weapons attack by the Syrian
government which the US says killed more than 1,400 people. Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad’s government denies responsibility for the
attack.
"There is a state of panic in Damascus," according to Sham Land*, an
activist in Damascus who documents civilian casualties for the Syrian
Network for Human Rights and uses a pseudonym for security reasons.
"People are lining up to get bread... Many people are preparing to leave
the city, especially people who live near the government security
buildings."
In the past week, the value of the Syrian pound has depreciated sharply,
and fewer people are walking around on the streets or driving through
the city in the evenings, Land, a 31-year-old former dentist, told IRIN
via Skype. "Some people are preparing food and storing it. If they have a
house in the countryside, they're leaving to go there," he said.
“Pro-Assad people” have started “running away and taking their families
out of Damascus,” said Susan Ahmed*, 30, an activist living in a
regime-held part of the city. Regardless of their political beliefs,
“people are afraid” and some are fleeing to “safer areas”, she added.
More than two years of conflict between government and rebel forces in
Syria have killed over 100,000 people, according to UN Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon, and driven more than six million from their homes, either
internally or to neighbouring countries. But the capital Damascus has
been largely spared from the worst of the fighting.
Although limited and targeted strikes would be unlikely to cause a
significant increase in humanitarian needs, aid workers said, “there’s a
lot of uncertainty about what the worst case is,” as one aid worker put
it.
Lebanon
So far, the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) has noted no increase in refugees arriving at international borders.
And while a mass outflow remains unlikely, “we are preparing for it and
accelerating all the stockpiling and the preparations at the moment,”
said Roberta Russo, communications officer with UNHCR in Lebanon - the
closest country for people fleeing Damascus.
On 28 August, UNHCR agreed with the Lebanese government to quickly set
up reception areas at the Masna’a border crossing to be able to more
easily provide medical care, counselling and referrals to refugees as
they cross the border. Thousands continue to cross the border daily,
while many simultaneously return to Syria.
Lebanon is already home to more than 710,000 Syrian refugees -
equivalent to more than 15 percent of its original population - who are
staying with friends and family, renting apartments, squatting in
abandoned or half-finished buildings or establishing informal
settlements. There are no formal camps for Syrian refugees in Lebanon.
“The shelter options are exhausted,” Russo told IRIN. “We can’t absorb any more.”
UNHCR’s efforts to obtain government permission to establish transit
sites that could house 20-25,000 refugees each as a last resort have not
succeeded. This could cause challenges in case of a mass influx.
“We have informal settlements mushrooming everywhere. Some are also in
flood-prone areas and the facilities are not good enough,” Russo said.
“I don’t know what will happen if the government doesn’t agree.”
One major question is whether Lebanon, which has increased entry restrictions for Syrians and refused entry to Palestinians from Syria, and Jordan, which has limited the number of refugees it admits, will provide unrestricted access to anyone seeking refuge in the case of an escalation of violence.
Jordan
UNHCR in Jordan is “well-placed” to handle any influx, the agency’s
representative in Jordan, Andrew Harper, said, having grown accustomed
to several thousand new arrivals a day, and with stocks in place for an
additional 100,000 people.
Jordan’s Za’atari camp could take in at least 20,000 more people; and a
new Jordanian camp, called Azraq, is set to open in two weeks with a
capacity of 50,000.
UNHCR has a global stockpile of supplies - including tents, plastic
sheeting and kitchen sets - in Dubai, currently enough for 350,000,
according to UNHCR regional spokesperson Peter Kessler.
“Our job is to be prepared,” Kessler told IRIN. “We have to work to assist people in need and to plan for eventualities.”
But any influx will necessarily strain services that are already stretched in Za’atari and not yet ready in Azraq.
“It’s not the tents and the places to put them up that is the
challenge,” one aid worker said. “It’s all the services and security
which goes around the physical location of the new tent site, which is
expensive and time-consuming to get ready, particularly provision of
water, adjusting food distribution, having adequate security, ensuring
the site is adequately drained. All of that is ongoing in Azraq.”
Funding for preparedness?
“The big message is,” he continued, “what are donors - over and above
their current commitments for the response in Syria and the region -
willing to commit for enhanced preparedness, particularly to increase
stockpiles, to fast-track preparations for new camps in Jordan and to
secure more funds for shelter programming in Lebanon?”
A UN-coordinated appeal for a record $4.4 billion to help Syrians already in need inside and outside their country in 2013 is currently less than 40 percent funded.
Aid workers say donors are unlikely to focus on preparing for potential
future scenarios as they are already squeezed between many crises and
finite aid budgets.
“Our concern is: Are we able to pay for these supplies as quickly as we
would need to deliver?” asked Juliette Touma, regional spokesperson for
the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF).
Describing the situation in Syria as a “humanitarian crisis of rarely
precedented proportions”, El Hillo, the humanitarian coordinator, said
donor funding must be predictable and timely. He said the UN was
exploring the unusual step of requesting funding from its Central
Emergency Response Fund - usually reserved for responding to actual
rather than potential needs - to procure and pre-position supplies to be
prepared for any eventuality.
Damascus
Inside Syria, UN agencies have long struggled to meet rising needs,
operating in a complicated bureaucratic and security environment, with
limited funding and insufficient implementing partners.
“As it is, we are unable to fully respond to the needs as they exist now
in the country because of insecurity, because of the difficulty of
access, because of the enormity of the challenge and the needs,” El
Hillo said. “There is an expectation that this is going to create new
challenges in addition to those that already exist.”
Many Syrians have grown accustomed to violence and see potential US
missile strikes as nothing more than what they have already experienced
after two years of shelling, street clashes, suicide bombs, snipers and
kidnappings. In many respects, daily life in Damascus continues.
But others fear foreign military attacks will kill or injure yet more
civilians, even if bombardment has “become something very normal”, as
activist Abu Yasin* put it. He said residents have set up bomb shelters
for women and children.
“Regardless of what happens, our concern is that children be protected at all times,” UNICEF’s Touma said.
People are trying to stock up on “everyday” supplies, like first aid
kits, bread and gas in anticipation of Western attacks, said Ahmad, the
activist, but increased demand has meant that many basics - including
children’s milk formula and bread - are not available and goods are very
expensive. High demand for bread has been problematic on and off for
months, she said via Skype, but the news of a possible foreign military
attack has exacerbated the problem.
“People stayed [in lines] until midnight [on 29 August] trying to get
bread,” she said. Instead of bread, she added, people are eating rice
and bulgur.
Another resident of Damascus, who preferred anonymity, said many
residents could not afford to stock up on supplies because of rising
prices.
In other areas, there is little access in the first place. In the Rural
Damascus town of Muadhamiya, there is widespread hunger, according to
Omar Hakeem, a doctor. The area also has no communications network,
water or electricity due to a year-long “siege” by al-Assad’s military
forces, Hakeem, 26, told IRIN.
UN agencies in Damascus have vowed
to maintain their operations as best they can despite possible US
strikes. Most UN agencies work through local NGOs and the Syrian Arab
Red Crescent.
El Hillo said agencies would use “all means possible” to meet any
increase in needs, by expanding partnerships with local NGOs, charity
organizations, third party deliveries through contractors or private
sector arrangements.
*not a real name