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Terrorism

Extremists frustrate aid effort in north-west Syria

By AFP

Members of the Syrian Civil Defence, also known as the "White Helmets", search the rubble of a collapsed building following an explosion in the town of Jisr al-Shughur, in the west of the province of Idlib, on April 24th. [Omar Haj Kadour/AFP]

Members of the Syrian Civil Defence, also known as the "White Helmets", search the rubble of a collapsed building following an explosion in the town of Jisr al-Shughur, in the west of the province of Idlib, on April 24th. [Omar Haj Kadour/AFP]

Threats, interference and aid deliveries in jeopardy -- relief workers say extremists are adding to the huge challenges they face in violence-plagued north-west Syria where a fragile ceasefire is at risk.

The Idlib region, controlled by the Tahrir al-Sham alliance, is one of the last areas of the country that President Bashar al-Assad has yet to recapture.

Around 2.7 million of its roughly three million residents need humanitarian assistance according to the UN.

Most rely heavily on food, medicine and other aid brought across from Turkey by the UN and charity groups.

Children carry blankets and mattresses received from emergency aid agencies at a makeshift camp for displaced people near the town of Atme close to the Turkish border in Syria's Idlib province on January 10th. [Aref Watad/AFP]

Children carry blankets and mattresses received from emergency aid agencies at a makeshift camp for displaced people near the town of Atme close to the Turkish border in Syria's Idlib province on January 10th. [Aref Watad/AFP]

But efforts by the "de-facto authorities" in Idlib "to tamper with, impede or frustrate the delivery of humanitarian assistance including by undermining the safety of humanitarian workers, has been an unfortunate reality", said Rachel Sider of the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC).

Tahrir al-Sham and its civil wing -- the so-called "Salvation Government" -- cemented control over Idlib in the beginning of the year.

"The interference has increased since January," said a humanitarian worker in Idlib, who wanted to remain anonymous for fear of retaliation.

"There is not a single aid organisation that has been spared threats, arrests, or closure for very silly reasons," he said, even as Idlib has come under increased bombardment by the regime and its ally Russia over the past month.

In April, extremists threatened to detain him because he refused to provide them with food baskets his team was distributing at a camp for the displaced in southern Idlib, he added.

"They told me I should give them aid because they are mujahideen," said the 27-year-old.

He said HTS also detained him for four days seven months ago in Idlib city for photographing aid deliveries without their authorisation.

Militants beat him, confiscated his laptop, and broke his camera, he said.

"They told me I should thank God I was being released alive."

'Interference'

Paul Donohoe of the International Rescue Committee said "aid groups face interference from armed groups in Idlib, such as the restricting of access to vulnerable populations or attempting to influence beneficiary selection and the location of aid delivery".

He declined to provide more detail but a second humanitarian worker in Idlib, who also asked to remain anonymous, said several projects by international aid agencies have been dropped in recent months because of such meddling.

A plan to provide bakeries in Idlib with free flour was scrapped because the Salvation Government insisted on limiting beneficiaries to bakeries it is affiliated with, the 29-year-old said.

"Our activities as an organisation have become very modest since this happened to us," he added.

The governing body is also trying to ensure its affiliates are among those who secure tenders with aid agencies, which attempt to avoid this through screening, he said.

"They want a cut of any project implemented in the area," he said.

The encroachment has sparked concern that relief items and aid money may fall in the wrong hands.

Sider, of the NRC, said: "In this environment, aid agencies cannot completely eliminate the risk of diversion and we'd like donors to recognise this."

The UN has said it is taking extra measures to combat diversion.

They include "additional screening from partners, suppliers, even workers, staff, and third party monitoring, including the use of modern technology -- barcoding, establishing hotlines -- to be able to be sure that aid reaches the right people," the UN regional co-ordinator for Syria, Panos Moumtzis, told AFP.

'The pressure only grows'

There has yet to be any major decrease in humanitarian assistance but some donors have cut funding, said Ahmed Mahmoud, Syria director for the Islamic Relief charity.

"So far, five major hospitals have had to close entirely and seven other medical facilities -- including hospitals focusing on pediatrics and obstetrics -- severely cut back their operations due to funding cuts," he said.

Though there could also be other reasons, "some donors may have concerns regarding the shifts in control in north-western Syria, which may have affected their funding decisions".

"As one facility after another shuts its doors, the pressure only grows on those that remain," he said.

For its part, the Salvation Government denies jeopardising relief efforts.

A Salvation Government official in charge of co-ordinating aid, who gave his name as Dr. Jihad, said the administration was "striving to organise (humanitarian) work" by strengthening co-operation with relief agencies and facilitating aid deliveries.

"The more we share responsibility and decision making and the more we co-ordinate our work, the better the results," he told AFP.

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