"In the case of Iraq, it is less a problem of money than a problem of access," said EU Humanitarian Aid Commissioner Kristlina Georgieva as she announced the increase in EU aid to Iraq, which brings the total from Brussels to 17 million euros (USD 22.8 million) for the year.
"This is to help hundreds of thousands of Iraqis, including minority groups displaced on the mountains of Sinjar," Georgieva said in reference to the desperate civilians who had been besieged by jihadists on a mountain in northern Iraq.
"On this, the world is moving backwards," she said.
Georgieva said the Iraq crisis was the most urgent problem facing the planet today, despite a multitude of emergencies unfurling at a "magnitude not known since the great wars in Europe".
The commissioner, who is on the short-list to replace EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton later this year, announced the boost in assistance as envoys from EU member states were meeting to better coordinate action on Iraq, Ukraine and Gaza.
EU sources told AFP that member state envoys at the meeting were open to assembling ministers in the heart of summer, but with divisions wide over whether the bloc as a whole should expressly support the arming of Iraqi forces, the decision could yet be delayed.
When asked if bolder moves were needed in Iraq, Georgieva said humanitarian agencies could only provide "seed money" in face of such challenges, noting that the Saudi kingdom last month pledged Baghdad a whopping USD 500 million to be run through several UN agencies.
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