Thursday, 18th April 2024
To guardian.ng
Search

Nearly 1,700 Syrian Kurds seek refuge in Iraq

By AFP
18 October 2019   |   11:19 am
The United Nations said Friday that nearly 1,700 people, most of them women and children, had fled fighting in northeastern Syria and crossed into Iraq in recent days.

An image released by Kurdish news channel RUDAW on October 18, 2019 shows people fleeing the ongoing Turkish offensive against Kurdish-controlled areas of northeastern Syria in Tal Tamr, near the Syrian Kurdish town of Ras al-Ain, on October 17, 2019. – Sporadic clashes between Turkish forces and Kurdish groups were ongoing in a battleground Syrian border town on October 18, a monitor said, despite Ankara’s announcement of a five-day truce. “There are sporadic artillery strikes and you can hear shooting in the town of Ras al-Ain,” said Rami Abdul Rahman, head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. (Photo by HO / various sources / AFP) / 

The United Nations said Friday that nearly 1,700 people, most of them women and children, had fled fighting in northeastern Syria and crossed into Iraq in recent days.

“For the fourth consecutive day, UNHCR … has been receiving hundreds of refugees crossing the border into Iraq from northeast Syria,” UN refugee agency spokesman Andrej Mahecic told reporters in Geneva.

He first said that “over 1,600 Syrian refugees have been transported from the border areas to Bardarash refugee camp”, about 150 kilometres (90 miles) east of the Syria-Iraq border, adding though that another 734 people had been registered to cross the border overnight.

Mahecic said the camp had “been prepped to receive the latest arrivals fleeing the fighting in northern Syria.”

The UN currently estimates that around 166,000 people have been forced to flee their homes since Turkey launched its offensive in northeastern Syria on October 9.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor has meanwhile put the number far higher, saying more than 300,000 civilians had been displaced by the assault, calling it one of the largest upheavals since Syria’s civil war began in 2011.

The monitor said nearly 500 people have been killed including dozens of civilians, the majority on the Kurdish side.

Mahecic said that refugees arriving in Iraq had told UNHCR staff that “it took them days to get to the border as they fled amid shelling and fighting”.

“Most of the new arrivals are women, children and elderly,” he said, adding that some had “required psychosocial support”.

The UN’s World Food Programme meanwhile said it had revised up plans for monthly food assistance in northeastern Syria, with the aim of supporting some 580,000 people in the region this month alone.

“WFP currently has in stock general food assistance rations sufficient for over 500,000 people and ready-to-eat rations sufficient for 132,000 people,” spokesman Herve Verhoosel said, adding that production of further stocks was ongoing.

In this article

0 Comments