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Syria: 80,000 in need of aid as MSF responds to displacement crisis

11 Dec 24

Syria: 80,000 in need of aid as MSF responds to displacement crisis

In response to the recent developments in Syria, MSF has been providing critical relief to thousands of displaced people now seeking safety in Tabqa and Raqqa, north Syria. Caption
In response to the recent developments in Syria, MSF has been providing critical relief to thousands of displaced people now seeking safety in Tabqa and Raqqa, north Syria.

In response to significant developments in Syria, including substantial displacement caused by ongoing hostilities in the northern part of the country, Médecins Sans Frontières / Doctors Without Borders (MSF) is providing critical aid to tens of thousands of displaced people. 

What is MSF doing in Syria?

In northern Syria, MSF supports primary healthcare clinics offering care for those with non-communicable diseases (NCD) including also mental health and psychological support programs; inpatient and ambulatory units for the care of malnutrition; and an emergency room.

In Al-Hol, MSF also runs a reverse osmosis water purification plant to provide safe drinking water for Al-Hol camp population.

In addition, MSF teams frequently respond to outbreaks of measles and cholera while maintaining capacity to manage other emergencies.

MSF currently does not work in the areas that were until recently controlled by the former Syrian government.

According to local authorities, more than 80,000 people have been displaced into the areas of Tabqa, Raqqa and Hassakeh.

In Tabqa, the stadium and schools are used for receiving and sheltering displaced people. The situation in these locations is dire.

Temperatures drop below freezing, people are without blankets or adequate warmth. The facilities are not designed to house people.

Latrines, potable water, and food are all insufficient, as authorities have not had sufficient time or resources to prepare adequately.

Existing medical services in some areas receiving displaced people have quickly become overwhelmed by the influx of people.

We distributed water, tents, blankets, mattresses, and infant formula packs to those in immediate need. Caption
We distributed water, tents, blankets, mattresses, and infant formula packs to those in immediate need.

Displacement

One displaced woman recounted:

“For now we don't have any plan. We cannot go to Qamishli or Kobane (Ain Al Arab) because of money - we cannot afford it. We are waiting for good news every day to see if we can go back.

“Even if I had money I would go back to my village in Afrin. We are originally from Afrin. This was the second time we were displaced.

“There were airstrikes, gunshots, so we left the area. We hope one day we will go back to our village. Now the situation has changed everything.”

MSF has received reports of displaced people facing multiple violations during their journey from Tal Rifaat (Shahba) in northern Aleppo to Northeast Syria.

One displaced man said: “Shahba looked like a nightmare, we didn't know what was going on. On the journey we faced too many armed people. They threatened us.

“‘We will follow you,’ they said. They said bad words to us. In the middle of the journey, after midnight, there was a convoy of 400 cars or more. People with torches wearing military uniforms stopped us.  

“People were shouted at to give their phones; they were wearing military uniforms, but we don't know who they were." 

At MSF's out-patient department in Batil refugee camp Gandhi Pant, a nurse, escorts a patient with a possible appendicitis to a waiting ambulance. 

Batil is one of three camps in South Sudan’s Upper Nile State sheltering at least 113,000 refugees who have crossed the border from Blue Nile state to escape fighting between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the SPLM-North armed group. Refugees arrive at the camp with harrowing stories of being bombed out of their homes, or having their villages burned. The camps into which they have poured are on a vast floodplain, leaving many tents flooded and refugees vulnerable to disease. Mortality rates in Batil camp are at emergency levels, malnutrition rates are more than five times above emergency thresholds, and diarrhea and malarial cases are rising.

Help us prepare for the next emergency

Vast needs

“The situation faced by people who have been displaced is overwhelming," says Allen Murphy, MSF head of programmes in Northeast Syria.

“People urgently need access to essential services, including healthcare, clean water and shelter, as the temperature is dropping considerably. In the current situation, there is also a risk of additional waves of displacement.”

Over the past week, MSF teams have distributed more than 10,000 bottles of water, 200 large tents, infant formula packs and diapers, blankets and mattresses to those in immediate need in Tabqa.

These essential supplies are vital in ensuring the health, comfort, and dignity of those who have been forced to flee their homes.

In addition to providing these items, we have also carried out activities to improve access to clean water, including water trucking to collective centres, providing emergency shelters, and running mobile clinics to provide urgently needed healthcare.

“We are committed to continuing to respond to the new occurring needs of the people,” says Martine Flokstra, MSF operations manager for Syria.

“However, the sheer scale of the needs is outpacing the available capacity and resources of responders. Vulnerable peoples – many of whom have endured displacement multiple times – require an urgent and dramatic scale-up in humanitarian aid to support them.”

Ongoing challenges

The security situation our teams are seeing on the ground in northeast Syria is characterized by ongoing localised violence and active hostilities with potential threats from neighbouring countries which present an immediate risk to the safety of civilians.

“Challenges for people are not reversed overnight, and the context is one of ongoing instability and displacement, so even if many people are currently choosing to return to Syria, it is still critical that this is a voluntary choice,” adds Flokstra.

MSF calls for the protection of civilians and for all warring parties to take all necessary measures to avoid further suffering and displacement of Syrians.

Additionally, we call for safe access of humanitarian organisations to affected population to allow effective provision of life-saving service.

MSF in Syria

Since it began in 2012, the civil war in Syria has killed hundreds of thousands of people, displaced millions more, and caused widespread destruction and suffering.

The impact of the war continues to hit hardest in northern Syria, where many people struggle to access clean water and essential healthcare.

In northern Syria, our teams run or support hospitals and health centres, run mobile clinics and provide healthcare, water and sanitation in displacement camps. We frequently respond to outbreaks of dangerous diseases such as cholera and measles.

In February 2023, in the aftermath of the catastrophic Syria-Türkiye earthquakes, our teams already working in the region were able to launch an emergency response within the first few hours of the disaster – treating patients and delivering supplies in hard-hit areas.