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US aid freezes escalate Syria’s crisis

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US aid freezes escalate Syria’s crisis
Source:
The New Humanitarian
2025-02-17
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This story was first published by the New Humanitarian. Three weeks after US President Donald Trump’s order to freeze foreign aid, Syrians are already seeing medical clinics providing urgent assistance close, water distributions slow down, and bread distribution in many displacement camps grinds to a halt. After nearly 14 years of war, the UN estimates that 16.5 million people across Syria need some sort of aid. While the December overthrow of President Bashar al-Assad is beginning to change the way aid works in the country, the need for widespread relief for those dealing with severe poverty, food insecurity, and mass internal displacement has been unrelenting. Syria’s already troubled (and hugely underfunded) aid landscape has been plunged into further turmoil since late January, when Trump issued sweeping orders to stop US-funded aid work, followed by a series of waivers that seemed to allow some programmes – specifically for “lifesaving” activities – to continue. Aid workers in Syria say a lack of clarity on what this means has translated into thousands of staff being let go and the end of some critical programmes. The US is the largest donor to aid coordinated by the UN in Syria, contributing 25% of funding in 2024. But a significant amount of international aid funding is not part of this coordination structure, and funding streams can be difficult to untangle. That’s just one of the reasons that it’s hard to tell exactly how many people across Syria this will affect. Another is the fact that so many aid workers – both Syrian and international – have been either laid off or suspended over the past few weeks. “At one point we said, ‘let’s collect data on how this is impacting people and programmes,’” Giovanni Sciolto, a representative of the Syria INGO Forum (SIRF), which represents more than 70 international NGOs working across Syria, told The New Humanitarian. But “there aren’t even people [still employed] to collect data on how bad it is”. he said. Follow Link for Full Story...

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