UN relief efforts in war-torn Syria are struggling to reach 40 per cent of civilians in need and face a major funding shortfall, a senior UN aid official said today.
As the war heads toward a fifth year, some 4.8 million Syrians or around 40 percent of the total 12.2 million people in need of help are difficult to reach, said Assistant Secretary-General for aid Kang Kyung-wha.
Kang told the Security Council that UN agencies were unable in December to deliver food to the Raqqa and Deir ez Zor areas controlled by the Islamic State group and to towns besieged by Syrian government troops and opposition forces.
Also Read
Cross-border deliveries of aid have reached over 700,000 people, but "despite these efforts, needs continue to outpace response," said Kang.
The United Nations is requesting USD 2.9 billion dollars this year to fund aid operations for Syria, where fighting has led to what Kang described as "one of the worst displacement of people the world has seen in decades."
UN agencies received less than half of the amount requested for last year, leaving "hundreds of thousands" of civilians without aid during the harsh winter months, said Kang.
"More funding is urgently required," she told the council.
A total of 7.6 million people have been displaced by the fighting inside Syria in addition to 3.8 million refugees who have fled to neighboring countries, mostly Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey.
"This council must find a way to end the conflict in Syria," said Kang, noting that in four years, the number of Syrians in need of assistance had surged from one million to 12 million.


