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| Syria's seven-year conflict has killed more than 350,000 people and displaced millions (AFP Photo/LOUAI BESHARA) |
Geneva (AFP) - Providing humanitarian aid in war-ravaged Syria looks set to shift increasingly away from emergency, life-saving assistance towards rehabilitating devastated areas to help Syrians return home, the head of the Red Cross said Wednesday.
Peter
Maurer told reporters in Geneva that the conflict appeared to be entering a new
stage, with fewer "big-battle" moments and perhaps even a chance to
provide displaced Syrians with a sense of normalcy after seven years of
devastating violence.
"Syria
to us looks very different from Syria last year or from Syria two years
ago," Maurer said.
Syria has
been torn apart a war that has left more than 350,000 people dead and displaced
millions.
But Maurer
said that as the situation in many parts of the country appears to be
stabilising, he expected to see a shift away from a pure focus on emergency
assistance towards reestablishing services in areas people want to return to.
"For
us it is just important that we get the rehabilitation thing going," he
said.
Maurer
pointed out that Syria now appeared to be split into fairly clearly defined
territories, and said the "big actors" seemed ready to work towards
"consensus to stop the war and to go into a phase of more
tranquility."
'Post-big-battle era'?
"I
have the impression we are at a little bit of a threshold moment," he
said, adding that he believed "we are entering the post-big battle era."
The
Damascus regime has retaken large parts of Syria since 2015 with Russia's
backing, but opposition groups with Western backing still control most of the
northern Idlib province.
Turkey also
controls an area in the north after launching an operation into Syria in
January to root out the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) militia in the
Afrin enclave.
Maurer
acknowledged that the situation could still spiral in a "dangerous"
direction.
But he said
his recent visits to Moscow and other capitals had convinced him there was now
a "minimal consensus" to stabilise the country.
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Peter
Maurer, President of the International Committee of the Red Cross, says
the
Syria conflict may be changing (AFP Photo/HAMZA AL-AJWEH)
|
Despite a
relative calm in a number of places across the country, Maurer stressed that
"humanitarian assistance (must) continue to go into Syria, because ...
there are a lot of humanitarian needs."
But he said
the nature of the assistance would evolve in many places away from pure
emergency assistance towards "protection activities".
Chance of
normalcy?
Such activities
include helping reestablish basic services, assisting people to find lost
family members and also help provide protection to avoid communities coming
under attack.
ICRC said
it had received some 13,000 tracing requests from people looking for loved ones
since the start of the conflict, with the number of requests soaring 25 percent
in 2017.
This
increase, Maurer said, indicated that people were no longer focused only on
emergency needs but could concentrate more on broader necessities.
These include
reestablishing basic services in relatively stable areas that people want to
return to, he said.
Maurer
insisted that this should not be seen as a reconstruction bid -- a
controversial issue that is politically fraught, with widespread disagreement
on whether to work with the regime of President Bashar al-Assad to rebuild the
country.
"When
you bring a mobile medical clinic in to a destroyed city in Syria to which
people are returning, that is not reconstruction. That is to us
rehabilitation."
Maurer said
he believed there was "the chance in Syria, with a little bit of support
to bring back normalcy to Syrians," adding though that "just to do
minimal humanitarian assistance won't do the trick."


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