Web Stories Wednesday, January 8

DAMASCUS: The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) plans to expand its work in Syria significantly beyond an initial US$100 million programme, the organisation’s president said on Monday (Jan 6), citing pressing needs in the health, water and power sectors.

Syria requires US$4.07 billion in aid this year, but only 33.1 per cent has been funded, leaving a US$2.73 billion gap, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

The ICRC’s expected expansion follows new access to all regions of the country after the toppling of president Bashar al-Assad last month.

“Our programme originally for this year for Syria was US$100 million, but we are likely to expand that significantly,” ICRC President Mirjana Spoljaric told Reuters on the sidelines of a visit to the country.

She said individual donor countries had already come forward with an increase in funding for Syria.

ICRC was one of the few international organisations still operating in Syria under Assad’s rule, working on infrastructure projects including water and electricity systems.

“We need to expand that work, we have a lot to do in the health sector,” she added.

The organisation is engaged in rehabilitation work to sustain water provision at 40 per cent to 50 per cent of what it was before the war, but protection of water facilities remains important as some are close to places where fighting is still under way.

“There are facilities next to the Euphrates Lake that are specific to the protection requirement at the moment,” she said.

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