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Displaced Syrians receive first aid since January: UN

Displaced Syrians receive first aid since January: UN
For the first time since January, aid has been delivered to displaced Syrians near the Jordanian border.
2 min read
03 November, 2018
The Syrian regime has killed hundreds of thousands of Syrians [Getty]

An aid convoy on Saturday reached a camp for displaced Syrians near the Jordanian border, the United Nations, in the first such delivery since January.

"The UN and SARC are delivering humanitarian assistance to 50,000 people in need at Rukban camp in southeast Syria," the UN said in a statement, adding the delivery was expected to take three to four days.

The convoy included much-needed food, as well as health assistance, the statement said.

"We are delivering food, sanitation and hygiene supplies, nutrition and health assistance in addition to other core relief items," the UN's humanitarian coordinator in Syria Ali al-Zaatari said in a statement.

"We are also conducting an emergency vaccination campaign to protect some 10,000 children against measles, polio and other deadly diseases."

More than 70 trucks would ferry in over 10,000 food parcels and bags of flour, as well as clothes for 18,000 children, the Red Crescent said.

The aid would also include newborn baby kits for 1,200 children, medicines, medical supplies and nutritional supplements for children and women, it said.

SARC president Khaled Hboubati said it was the organisation's first convoy to Rukban camp.

Mark Lowcock, UN under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs, on Monday said that the camp had not received any assistance since January, with the last delivery coming via Jordan.

Conditions have since deteriorated with most inhabitants unable to afford what little food is smuggled across the Jordanian border, and no health facilities in the camp.

Last month, a girl of four months died of blood poisoning and dehydration, and a five-day-old boy lost his life to blood poisoning and severe malnutrition, according to UN children agency UNICEF.

A suicide bombing claimed by the Islamic State jihadist group in June 2016 killed seven Jordanian soldiers in no-man's-land close to the nearby Rukban crossing.

Soon afterwards, the army declared Jordan's desert regions that stretch northeast to Syria and east to Iraq "closed military zones".

The kingdom, part of the US-led coalition fighting IS, has allowed several humanitarian aid deliveries to the area following UN requests, but the borders remain closed.

The camp, home to displaced people from across Syria, also lies close to the al-Tanf base used by the US-led coalition fighting IS.

Syria's civil war has killed more than 360,000 people and displaced millions since it started with the brutal repression of anti-government protests in 2011.

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