Turkey helped save tens of thousands in Syria, UN official

The Turkish government has helped save tens of thousands of lives in Syria, Kevin Kennedy, the UN’s regional humanitarian coordinator for Syria crisis, said on Monday.

Speaking exclusively to Anadolu Agency, Kennedy said several national and international nongovernmental organizations and the United Nations had delivered humanitarian assistance to Syrians via Turkey.

Kennedy underlined Turkey’s cooperation in getting help to Syria, saying that without Turkey’s help “we would be in very difficult circumstances both inside Turkey and across the border.”

Praising the Turkish government and people’s hospitality towards Syrians, Kennedy called Turkey’s role “critical”.

“It’s been critical to our work in the region that these people are hosted so well by the government and people.”

Asked about setting up safe zones inside Syria -- an idea long championed by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan -- Kennedy said these must be “untouchable areas” and would only work when “planes are not flying over your head” and NGOs can operate freely.

Kennedy also said any opportunity to provide assistance and have access to these war-torn areas would be beneficial.

Turkey hosts more Syrian refugees than any other country in the world. The country has spent around $25 billion helping and sheltering refugees since the beginning of the war.

Since late August, when Turkey’s Operation Euphrates Shield began to rid Syria’s northern border area of terrorists, the Turkish government and many Turkish NGOs, including the Turkish Red Crescent, have been aiding refugees living not only in Turkey, but also in crisis-hit border areas inside Syria.

The Syrian Center for Policy Research put the death toll from the six-year Assad war at more than 470,000 people.

التعليقات (0)

    0

    الأكثر قراءة

    💡 أهم المواضيع

    ✨ أهم التصنيفات