Saturday, June 21, 2014

Syria warns UN that aid delivery without consent is "attack"

Syria’s government warned the UN Security Council on Friday that delivering humanitarian aid across its borders into rebel-held areas without its consent would amount to an attack, suggesting it would have the right to retaliate against convoys.

As the veto-wielding members of the council – the United States, Britain, France, China and Russia – negotiate a draft resolution to boost aid access, Syria circulated a letter to the 15-member council from dozens of Arab and Syrian lawyers.


The June 18 letter, obtained by Reuters on Friday, argues against a bid by Western states for the resolution to be drafted under Chapter 7 of the UN charter, which would mean it could be enforced militarily and with coercive measures such as sanctions.

  • The humanitarian resolution text was drafted by Australia, Jordan and Luxembourg.
“The sole purpose of the initiative is to use United Nations auspices for the delivery of logistical backing to the terrorists,” the lawyers wrote in the letter that was sent to the United Nations by Syrian UN Ambassador Bashar Ja’afari.

“Importing aid in coordination with terrorist organisations and without consultation with the Syrian state would amount to an attack on the Syrian state and on its territorial integrity and political independence,” the lawyers argued.

  • UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told the Security Council in a report on Friday that the United Nations was ready to put in place “speedy, pragmatic and practical arrangements at critical border crossings” to deliver more aid.
“Such arrangements would allow United Nations convoys to cross the border into Syria – in their own vehicles, without the need for specific permits or visas – to deliver urgently needed relief to people in need,” Ban wrote in the report.

Looking for a ‘political big bang’

Amid the resolution negotiations, Russia said on Tuesday it has gained Syrian approval to open four border crossings named in the draft text. Russia’s UN Ambassador Vitaly Churkin called it “an elegant, innovative formula which will simplify the humanitarian procedures when the goods are actually on the territory”.

  • Western members of the council have been examining the draft since Tuesday and Churkin expressed hope that the resolution will be adopted quickly.
“Frankly, my suspicion is that their main interest very often ... [is] to produce some kind of a political big bang,” he said. “When the political big bang is not there, when in fact we focus on the humanitarian situation, then quite often they’ll lose interest in the entire exercise. So we’ll see what comes out of this discussion on the resolution.”

Australia’s UN Ambassador Gary Quinlan said on Thursday that the proposal “is not good enough” yet.

The lawyers stated that the Syrian government’s refusal to allow aid deliveries without its approval “is grounded in and motivated by the Charter of the United Nations, international resolutions and Syrian counterterrorism legislation.

“If anyone describes it as arbitrary, we invite them to provide the legal bases for their novel argument, which amounts to saying that the only way to protect civilians from terrorism is not to fight it, but to work with it,” they said.

Russia, supported by China, has previously vetoed four resolutions threatening any action against its ally, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Moscow has made clear it was against allowing cross-border access without the consent of Syria’s government and opposed a Chapter 7 resolution.

Half of country in urgent need of help


The Security Council achieved rare unity in unanimously approving a resolution in February that demanded rapid, safe and unhindered aid access in Syria, where a three-year civil war has killed more than 150,000 people.

But that resolution, which was legally binding but not enforceable, has failed to make a difference, Ban said in his fourth monthly report to the council on Friday on its implementation.

  • Ban said the humanitarian situation in Syria is worsening and the number of people needing urgent help has now reached 10.8 million – almost half of the country’s population of 22 million.
He said efforts to expand humanitarian assistance had “been met with continued delays and obstruction” – a combination of insecurity, the absence of agreements between parties for the delivery of aid and government bureaucratic obstacles.

“New government truck sealing procedures introduced in April failed to improve the reach of humanitarian aid, and in fact resulted in fewer people being reached than in May,” Ban said.

Ban said the current estimate of 3.5 million people living in areas that are difficult or impossible for humanitarian workers to reach is also likely to have increased to 4.7 million people.
(FRANCE 24 with REUTERS, AP)

http://www.france24.com
21/6/14
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  • UN will not give up trying to restore peace to your country,' Ban tells Syrian people....
UN, 20 June 2014 – Spotlighting the worsening of the already horrifying war in Syria, “which continues to bleed beyond its borders,” Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today delivered a strong rebuke to the world's indifference to the bloodshed and rejected the notion that a military solution is the only way to end it, offering instead a “principled and integrated” approach that would end the violence, jumpstart political talks and sow the seeds for a better future for the Syrian people.

“We must act. All the values for which we stand, and all the reasons for which the United Nation exist are at stake, here and now, across the devastated landscape that is Syria today,” declared Mr. Ban in an impassioned address to the Asia Society, urging the international community not to abandon the people of Syria and the region to “never-ending waves of cruelty and crisis.” ..................http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=48093#.U6SBjUDm7gw
 
20/6/14
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1 comment:

  1. UN: Nearly half of Syria's population needs urgent humanitarian aid...

    Currently, all UN aid must go through Damascus - a practice which UN humanitarian chief Valerie Amos has repeatedly criticized.

    The humanitarian situation in Syria is worsening and the number of people needing urgent help has reached 10.8 million — almost half of Syria's population of 22 million, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said Friday.

    Ban's monthly report to the UN Security Council said the current estimate of 3.5 million people living in areas that are difficult or impossible for humanitarian workers to reach is also likely to have increased to 4.7 million people.

    The UN chief painted a grim picture of a country gripped by severe levels of violence, including the intensified use of barrel bombs by government forces against civilian areas and suicide attacks, reported executions and other acts of terrorism by extremist groups.

    As a result, Ban said, the number of people in need has increased by 17 percent — from 9.3 million to 10.8 million.

    Ban said the rules that govern the conduct of war "are being flagrantly violated every day."

    "Efforts to expand humanitarian assistance to those most in need have been met with continued delays and obstruction," he said.

    Currently, all UN aid must go through Damascus — a practice which UN humanitarian chief Valerie Amos has repeatedly criticized.

    New procedures sealing government trucks delivering aid which were introduced in April resulted in fewer people being reached with aid in May, he said, and additional clearance requirements introduced by the government have further undermined access to people in desperate need of assistance.

    By June 9, only 12 percent of the 4.25 million people the UN World Food Program planned to provide with food had been reached compared to 26 percent at the same time in April, Ban said.

    The secretary-general decried the government's obstruction of the delivery of medicine and medical supplies, saying "it is inhumane and unlawful" that these potentially life-saving items continue to be removed from World Health Organization convoys entering opposition-controlled areas.

    As a result, he said, opposition-controlled areas received only 25 percent of the quantities distributed in the first three months of 2014..................http://www.haaretz.com/news/middle-east/1.600157
    21/6/14

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