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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

UN opening new Syria aid route to reach Raqa displaced

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Geneva: The UN expects to open a new Syria aid corridor on Thursday, which may help get supplies to desperate people fleeing the IS group stronghold of Raqa.


“Courageous humanitarian workers have been now travelling for days to open a new corridor from Aleppo in the west to Qamishli,” Jan Egeland, head of the UN-backed aid taskforce for Syria, told reporters in Geneva.


“We are hopeful that we will be able to reach that place very soon now, within hours hopefully,” he added.


Humanitarian workers have faced daunting challenges in responding to the crisis in Raqa, where the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces are battling to oust IS.


Tens of thousands of people have fled, but access to the remote region has proved difficult. The UN has relied on costly aid air drops to Qamishli, northeast of Raqa, from government-held Damascus.


Road convoys, which would get more supplies in than expensive air drops, was the only “sensible” option, said Egeland.


The mission expected shortly in Qamishli was a small “reconnaissance convoy”, he added.


But the UN has voiced concern about the safety of the route, which had been closed since 2013, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitoring group.


An estimated 300,000 civilians once lived under IS rule in Raqa, including 80,000 displaced from other parts of Syria before the group seized the city. The UN estimates that nearly 170,000 people fled Raqa city and its environs in April and May alone, and thousands of displaced civilians are now living in overcrowded and under-resourced camps.


IS seized Raqa in 2014, transforming it into the de facto Syrian capital of its self-declared “caliphate”.


The UN expects new waves of displacement as the battle inside Raqa city progresses.


Meanwhile, United Nations war crimes investigators expressed alarm on Wednesday at the “staggering” number of civilian deaths as US-backed forces battle to oust the IS group from its Syrian stronghold Raqa.


At least 300 civilians have been killed, although the actual number is likely higher according to UN officials.


“Civilians are caught up in the city under the oppressive rule of (IS) while facing extreme danger... due to excessive airstrikes,” Paulo Sergio Pinheiro, head of the UN Commission of Inquiry, told reporters. — AFP


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