UN: Escalating violence in southern Syria results in further deaths and displacement of Palestinian refugees

UNRWA, the UN agency responsible for providing humanitarian relief to Palestinian refugees, has this week expressed its alarm at escalating violence in Dera’a, southern Syria. There are an estimated 3,000 Palestinian families in the area, and recent fighting has interrupted UNRWA’s provision of health, education and food aid to them.

The nearby Jordanian border is sealed to people seeking to flee to safety. As UNRWA states, Palestine refugees in Syria (PRSs) are particularly vulnerable and are disproportionately affected by the conflict, due to their proximity to conflict areas, high rates of poverty, and the tenuous legal status of those forced to flee abroad.

 More than half of the 570,000 Palestinian refugees in Syria have had to flee  their homes due to the conflict. According to the Action Group for Palestinian Syrians, at least 3,400 PRSs have been killed in the conflict and, of the further 100,000 who have fled abroad, at least 50 have drowned trying to cross the Mediterranean Sea in search of safety in Europe.

Palestinian refugees from Syria are falling through the gaps in the world’s humanitarian response to the crisis. Medical Aid for Palestinians is calling for greater humanitarian aid to those living in countries neighbouring Syria, and for them to be granted equal access to safe, government-sponsored resettlement schemes to countries like the UK.

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UNRWA’s statement on the recent violence in Dera’a is below:

UNRWA deplores escalating violence in southern Syria which has led to large scale displacement, impeded humanitarian access and resulted in the deaths of Palestine refugees

Statement by UNRWA Spokesperson, Chris Gunness

08 March 2017, East Jerusalem

UNRWA is alarmed by the escalation of violence in Dera’a Governorate, south of the Syrian capital, Damascus. Fighting among parties to the conflict in the area is causing the displacement of Palestine refugees, impeding humanitarian access to critical aid and has resulted in the deaths of Palestine refugees in recent weeks.

Over the last three days, UNRWA has been providing assistance to over 200 families who have escaped violence in the village of Jilin located 25 km west of Dera’a City. UNRWA estimates that over 90 percent of the Palestine refugee families from Jilin have fled as a result of the escalation of armed violence reported to have started on February 20. The two UNRWA schools in the village are now closed.   

Although UNRWA is currently providing food and non-food items to the families who have reached its installations in Dera’a City and Damascus, the Agency is gravely concerned about the families who have sought refuge in the town of Muzeirib located in a hard to reach area. UNRWA continues to provide services such as schooling and health provision to an estimated 3,000 families in the area, however to receive UNRWA humanitarian assistance comprised of cash for food, supplementary food parcels and non-food items, Palestine refugees have to travel to Dera’a City for it. That can take up to eight hours to cover a 15 km journey on a dangerous road subject to sporadic closure.

The events which have taken place in Jilin are part of a larger pattern of population displacement caused by increased fighting in the south. In early February, 200 Palestine refugee families were displaced eastwards from the villages of Jamleh, Ash Shajarah, Koya, Tassil into Muzeirib and Jilin. 

The escalation of violence, in Dera’a City and the western countryside amongst the parties to the conflict exposes Palestine refugees to the risk of death and serious injury. In February, multiple sources reported that up to four Palestine refugees, including an elderly man and a child, were allegedly killed as a result of the fighting. In addition, an estimated 2,500 UNRWA students have missed an average of two weeks of schooling with intermittent school closures starting as of February 12. For students newly displaced from Jilin, UNRWA is supporting their re-enrolment both within the Dera’a Governorate and Damascus.

As an imperative to protect lives, UNRWA repeats its demand that all parties to the Syria conflict comply with their obligations under international law and desist from conducting conflict in civilian areas. Armed groups and other parties must comply with their legal obligations to protect civilians and facilitate safe and uninterrupted humanitarian access to live-saving services and relief assistance. 

Photo credit: UNRWA

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