In Syria, MSF Delivers Winter Kits to Displaced Families in Aleppo

MSF

Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) teams have managed to deliver urgently needed aid to thousands of people in the Syrian city of Aleppo, which is now going through its fifth winter of civil war. In partnership with the Aleppo City Local Council, 5,200 kits, including essential winter and hygiene items for displaced families, were handed out in the first weeks of December. A further 2,600 kits are due to be delivered in the coming days.

The kits were distributed according to the needs of each family and they include items such as winter clothes, blankets, tarpaulins and ropes, jerry cans for water, flashlights, and hygiene supplies including soap.

The ongoing conflict and insecurity in the area have hindered the distribution of non-food items by NGOs despite the increasing number of vulnerable people. The distribution was carried out in different neighborhoods following a needs assessment and it included families whose houses have been damaged by recent bombing and shelling.

“Close to 40,000 people will be covered by this distribution that aims to help them cope with the harsh conditions in which they have to live because of the conflict and the lack of resources,” said Carlos J. Francisco, coordinator of MSF projects in northern Syria. “After nearly five years of war, the humanitarian situation in Aleppo and its surroundings is becoming almost unbearable for a significant part of the population.”

“Every day we see attacks on residential areas and critical civilian infrastructure, such as hospitals or the city water distribution system," Francisco said. "Ambulances, markets or bakeries are targeted and destroyed and that makes it increasingly difficult and dangerous for people to access the most basic services, including medical and humanitarian assistance."

The protracted conflict, combined with harsh winter conditions, is worsening the already critical situation of displaced people inside the city. Out of an estimated 300,000 people currently living in eastern Aleppo, approximately 55 percent have been displaced due to the conflict. Of these, almost two-thirds have been forced to move more than once. Although the displaced population consists largely of inhabitants from the city itself, the current intensification of the conflict in Hama and Idlib—to the south of Aleppo—has forced at least 3,800 families to flee from these two areas. This number is likely to increase.

The city of Aleppo has been one of the front lines in this bitter conflict. Whole neighborhoods have been destroyed by explosions and years of semi-siege. Many neighborhoods don’t have electricity or running water.

The main road from Kilis in Turkey to Aleppo was almost completely cut off from humanitarian aid a few days ago. Several convoys were bombed and a truck used to deliver winter kits to families in Aleppo was fired on, which led to a temporary halt in the distribution. The road is not only the key supply route into the besieged eastern part of the city but is also essential for providing all the food, fuel and humanitarian aid for some 600,000 people living in the entire area.

Learn More About MSF's Work With Displaced People

MSF runs six medical facilities across northern Syria and directly supports more than 150 health posts and hospitals across the country, many of them in besieged areas. Most are temporary structures run by Syrian doctors without MSF staff, but with practical support and distance learning provided by MSF to help them deal with the extremely high level of medical needs.

Learn More About MSF's Work in and Around Syria

 

Distribution of winterkits in eastern Aleppo
MSF