Daunting aid challenges as civilians flee Syria’s Raqqa

Internally displaced people who fled Raqqa city ride a vehicle with their belongings in a camp near Ain Issa, Raqqa Governorate, Syria May 19, 2017. Picture taken May 19, 2017. (REUTERS)

BEIRUT: The battle to oust the Daesh group from its stronghold of Raqqa is creating daunting challenges for aid groups responding to the latest humanitarian crisis in the Syrian conflict.
Tens of thousands of civilians have fled Raqqa and its surroundings since the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) began its operation to capture the jihadist stronghold last year.
But new waves of displacement are expected as the battle inside the city progresses.
A key problem is getting aid supplies to the relatively remote desert region in Syria’s north, with just a trickle of assistance currently crossing from neighboring Turkey and Iraq.
“There is supply but it’s very, very limited and the needs of the population are very high,” said Puk Leenders, emergency coordinator for northern Syria for the group Doctors Without Borders (MSF).
Turkey considers the key Kurdish component of the SDF a “terrorist” group and its border with the area north of Raqqa is effectively closed.
The border crossing with Iraq, over 300 kilometers (180 miles) east of Raqqa city, is open to goods, but in practice sees little traffic, local officials say.
The United Nations, which operates inside Syria with government permission, has been able to airlift supplies to the city of Qamishli, northeast of Raqqa, from government-held Damascus.
But “this offered limited capacity and was insufficient to meet all needs,” said David Swanson, regional spokesman for the UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).
The UN is now hoping to start transporting aid from Aleppo to Qamishli, a distance of more than 400 kilometers, but the route must first be tested for security, said Swanson.
An estimated 300,000 civilians once lived under Daesh rule in Raqqa, including 80,000 displaced from other parts of Syria before the group seized the city.
Tens of thousands fled Raqqa and surrounding areas as the SDF closed in on the jihadist bastion.
The UN estimates more than 169,000 people fled Raqqa city and its environs in April and May alone, and thousands of displaced civilians are now living in overcrowded and underresourced camps.
In Ain Issa, 50 kilometers (30 miles) north of Raqqa, new arrivals say they are sleeping on the ground, with neither mattresses under them nor tents overhead.
“There are now more than 25,000 people in the Ain Issa camp, which was built with a capacity of 10,000,” camp director Jalal Ayyaf told AFP.
“International organizations are providing support, but it’s not sufficient for the numbers who are arriving.”
MSF’s Leenders said up to 800 people were arriving at Ain Issa each day, and many more people were simply sleeping on roadsides or under trees in the countryside north of the city.
The “highly volatile security situation” is another major concern for aid groups working in the region, said Paul Donohoe, senior media officer at the International Rescue Committee NGO.
“We know that there are many mines and IEDs (improvised explosive devices), there is also the risk of Daesh attacks and there have been reports of some fleeing civilians being killed by coalition air strikes.”
“It is thought up to half the population of Raqqa could ultimately flee the city and they will still be very vulnerable to mines and Daesh snipers, as well as air strikes.”
Arriving civilians are already presenting health problems ranging from dehydration to untreated chronic illness.
And aid groups expect an uptick in wounded arrivals as the fighting intensifies.
MSF is establishing stabilization points near the frontline to provide emergency care to keep the seriously injured alive until they reach hospitals.
But there is a severe shortage of qualified medical staff in the region, Leenders said, and medical facilities have also been affected by the fighting.
“Hospitals are being mined and it’s really difficult to start those back up because they need to be demined... It can be extremely challenging.”
The most difficult problem of all may simply be reaching those in need.
“Many people fleeing... initially end up in locations too close to the frontline for aid agencies to safely respond,” said Donohoe.
And others cannot leave at all, with Daesh reportedly using threats, arrests and violence to prevent civilians fleeing.
Those who do escape risk unexploded ordnance en route, and the threat of being mistaken for fleeing Daesh fighters by SDF forces or the US-led coalition.
MSF warned last week that civilians in the city faced “impossible choices.”
“Either they stay in Raqqa, subjecting their children to increased violence and air strikes, or they take them over the frontline, knowing they will need to cross minefields and may be caught in the crossfire.”