Truth will set you Free
Nadia Stephen Publisher
16 Feb 2023
“Without fault, in every group of women, individual or collective, their message was the same: We've had enough. We are exhausted, and we want reconciliation. We want peace. And we hope that during this very dark moment, that it'll be a moment where everyone's hearts and minds are open to the possibilities of peace,” Ahead of a briefing to journalists in New York on Wednesday, Laila Baker
The death toll from the double earthquakes that struck Syria and neighbouring Türkiye continues to rise and has surpassed 41,000, according to media reports.
Close to nine million people in Syria alone have been impacted, UN humanitarian affairs office, OCHA, reported, and damage is worse in the northwest - the last opposition stronghold - where needs were already at a record high in nearly 12 years of conflict.
More than 4,700 buildings have been destroyed, entire streets have been demolished, and 4.2 million people in Aleppo, and another three million in Idlib, have been affected.
UNFPA is the UN’s reproductive and sexual health agency and Ms. Baker has been visiting its clinics in the city, as well as makeshift shelters, and talking to partners and emergency response personnel.
While the level and scale of the devastation is impossible to comprehend, the damage goes much deeper.
“It's not just the physical destruction that is compounded by over a decade of conflict and war,” she said.
“It's the cumulative exhaustion of a people who have been fighting for their vital existence and now feel that the very moment that they're starting to return to some normalcy and see hope and light at the end of the tunnel, the natural disaster, this massive earthquake, has literally crumbled their hopes the way that the buildings have crumbled during the earthquake itself.”
Women and girls comprise the majority of people now in shelters in north and northwest Syria, or who have been displaced.
Prior to the earthquake, UNFPA and partners were running several initiatives to provide safe birth delivery and maternal health services, as well as protection from gender-based violence.
“Those have had to scale up massively,” said Ms. Baker, adding that services have also been integrated and expanded to makeshift shelters, mosques, schools and even parks, where conditions are less than ideal.
“I say ‘shelter’, but I use the term loosely. None of these makeshift shelters are equipped for human residents. They lack water. They lack good sanitation, electricity, heating. It was cold, it was dark in some places, but we are trying with our partners on the ground to provide vital services.”
UNFPA has distributed “dignity kits” to nearly 40,000 women and families in Aleppo alone, providing them with basic hygiene products and other personal care items that help instill a sense of normalcy.
The agency is also working with partners to supply medical equipment to the two hospitals there that are still functioning.
The ongoing war has left the Syrian healthcare system in tatters. Just half of all health facilities were operational prior to the earthquake, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
Senior WHO officials were in the country this past weekend, including agency chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus and Dr. Michael Ryan, Executive Director of its Health Emergencies Programme.
“I saw the destruction of entire communities, the unspeakable suffering and the determination of survivors and responders,” said Tedros, speaking on Wednesday during his regular media briefing from Geneva.
WHO is providing care to survivors, from psycho-social needs to medicines, he said, though noting that “the task of saving lives is only just beginning.”
“We need peace for health,” Dr. Ryan added. “From a humanitarian perspective, the scale-up is moving forward. However, our support will depend on the conditions” on the ground.