GENEVA: The UN migration agency on Thursday expanded an aid appeal for Syria to over $73 million, as the country transitions after years of civil war and decades of dictatorship.
The United Nations’ International Organization for Migration said it was more than doubling an appeal launched last month for Syria, from $30 million to $73.2 million, with the aim of assisting 1.1 million people across Syria over the next six months.
“IOM is committed to helping the people of Syria at this historical moment as the nation recovers from nearly 14 years of conflict,” IOM chief Amy Pope said in a statement.
“IOM will bring our deep experience in humanitarian assistance and recovery to help vulnerable communities across the country as we work with all partners to help build a better future for Syria.”
The Geneva-based agency said it was working to reestablish its presence inside Syria, after exiting Damascus in 2020, building on its experience working there in the preceding two decades, as well as on its cross-border activities in the past decade to bring aid to northwest Syria.
It said it aimed “to provide immediate assistance to the most at-risk and vulnerable communities, including displaced and returning groups, across Syria.”
The requested funds, it added, would be used to provide essential relief items and cash, shelter, protection assistance, water, sanitation, hygiene and health services.
They would also go to providing recovery support to people on the move, including those displaced, or preparing to relocate.
The dramatic political upheaval in Syria after the sudden ousting last month of strongman Bashar Assad after decades of dictatorship has spurred large movements of people.
Half of Syria’s population were forced from their homes during nearly 14 years of civil war, with millions fleeing the country and millions more displaced internally.
The UN refugee agency has said it expects around one million people to return to the country in the first half of this year.
And by the end of 2024, the UN humanitarian agency had already recorded the returns of nearly 500,000 people who had been internally displaced inside Syria, IOM pointed out.
UN migration agency appeals for $73 million in aid for Syria
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UN migration agency appeals for $73 million in aid for Syria
- UN’s International Organization for Migration more than doubling an appeal launched last month for Syria
- The Geneva-based agency said it was working to reestablish its presence inside Syria
Palestinian Authority says Israeli settlers set fire to another mosque in Nablus Governorate
- Duma residents able to control blaze before it spread to entire building, damage limited to entrance
- Second mosque to be targeted in area by Israeli settlers during Ramadan
LONDON: The Palestinian Authority reported on Thursday that Israeli settlers had set fire to the Mohammad Fayyad Mosque in the village of Duma, south of the city of Nablus.
The Ministry of Religious Endowments and Affairs said that settlers had also scrawled racist slogans on the mosque’s walls, and the body cautioned against further attempts to burn mosques in the occupied West Bank during Ramadan.
Residents of Duma were able to control the blaze before it could spread to the rest of the building and the damage was limited to the mosque’s entrance, reported the WAFA News Agency.
The ministry added: “These repeated and escalating attempts to burn mosques are part of a systematic plan by the occupiers to seize Palestinian land by undermining the security and resilience of Palestinian citizens in the West Bank.”
The statement condemned Israel’s closure of the gates at the Al-Aqsa Mosque in East Jerusalem on Feb. 28, a move announced alongside a state of emergency due to Israel’s conflict with Iran.
The Duma mosque is the second to be targeted by Israeli settlers during Ramadan. The Abu Bakr Al-Siddiq Mosque in Tell village, west of Nablus, was vandalized in February when offensive phrases were spray-painted and a fire started at the site, which resulted in the mosque being filled with black smoke and soot.
About 700,000 settlers live in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, alongside 3 million Palestinians.










