WFP trucks can now reach besieged Syrian town of Qamishli by road


nsnbc : The United Nations World Food program (WFP) announced that the first convoy of three trucks reached Qamishli in Syria’s northeastern Hasaka governorate. This is the first time that WFP has been able to deliver food by land in two years since the area became inaccessible for the WFP in December 2015. Since that time, the WFP has had to operate costly airlifts to bring food to vulnerable families.

WFP_Qamishli_Courtesy WFP_2017Qamishli is located in the self-proclaimed Republic of Rojava, that is primarily controlled by the Syrian – Kurdish PYD and its military wings, the YPG and YPJ. The WFP reported that the convoy delivered a month’s supply of food for 15,000 people.

“This humanitarian breakthrough will allow us to increase regular support for all 250,000 people in need in Hasakeh, compared to the 190,000 people we were able to assist through airlifts,” said Jakob Kern, WFP Country Director and Representative in Syria. “Road deliveries are also far more cost-efficient.”

Overland access to Hasaka was made possible due to an improved security situation, stated the WFP. For almost a year, WFP has conducted two airlifts per day, six days a week to deliver food assistance and relief supplies for people who were otherwise cut off from support.  “Once regular land access to Hasakeh is established, WFP will gradually phase out of its current airlift operation,” Kern added.

Replacing the current airlift operation with land access to Hasaka is expected to save an estimated US$19 million per year, which is enough to provide an additional 100,000 people with food assistance for one year.

The limited cargo capacity allowed by airlifts meant that only critical food items were prioritized for delivery. With the resumption of road deliveries, WFP will be able to send fortified date bars to resume its school meals programme. WFP will also reintroduce wheat flour in monthly food rations that contain staple food items such as cooking oil, rice and canned foods.

Every month, states that WFP, it delivers food assistance to four million vulnerable people across all 14 governorates in Syria. In addition to its emergency operation, WFP is also scaling up support for long-term recovery by focusing on livelihoods, nutrition and improving access to primary education for children in Syria through school meals.

The situation in Hasaka and Qamishli is particularly precarious because of the extreme complexity of military fronts, ever changing frontlines, and the dynamics caused by the complexity of the war theater in general.

The self-proclaimed “Republic of Rojava” is largely surrounded by overtly and/or covertly Turkish-backed “rebels”. Turkey backs, besides the so-called Free Syrian Army, a cohort of islamist, Turkmen and other groups in an attempt to crush Kurdish “aspirations” along its southern border to Syria. Turkey perceives the PYD and YPG/YPJ as terrorist organizations allied and on par with Turkey’s Kurdistan Worker’s Party (PKK).

CH/L – nsnbc 26.06.2917



Source Article from https://nsnbc.me/2017/06/26/wfp-trucks-can-now-reach-besieged-syrian-town-of-qamishli-by-road/

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