Qatar continues its support for the Syrian people through a wide range of humanitarian and development projects carried out by its official and charitable institutions across various Syrian governorates.

These efforts aim to strengthen the partnership between the two countries and respond to both urgent and long-term needs in vital sectors, amid the conditions that have followed years of crisis and the ongoing challenges facing reconstruction. Since the beginning of the crisis in Syria, Qatar Charity (QC), Qatar Red Crescent (QRCS), and the Qatar Fund for Development (QFFD) have been at the forefront of humanitarian action. They have swiftly provided emergency and long-term aid in close co-ordination with international and local humanitarian organisations, and official institutions. Their interventions span sectors such as health, shelter, education, food security, infrastructure, and economic empowerment projects.

Speaking to Qatar News Agency (QNA), Director of Qatar Charity's office in Turkiye and Syria Karam Ali said that since the beginning of the Syrian crisis, the QC has implemented more than 4,800 projects, with a total cost of around QR750mn. These projects, he said, have focused on health, shelter, food security, and education. He noted that the immediate response to the February earthquake amounted to around QR70mn, providing emergency shelters such as tents and prefabricated homes, along with food baskets and other essential supplies.

Ali explained that Qatar Charity used various mechanisms, either directly or through partners in Turkiye and Syria, in line with UN Security Council resolutions on cross-border humanitarian operations, as Northern Syria has been a primary focus of these efforts. Among QC's key achievements in the region is the establishment of "City of Hope", which houses 1,400 families and includes schools, health centres, a kindergarten, a market, and integrated service facilities. More than 2,000 homes have been built, either individually or as part of residential communities, he added.

As part of its Ramadan campaign, Qatar Charity hosted the 27th Night last year to rebuild 1,500 homes, he said, pointing out that work has already begun on 600 of these homes in Syria's Al-Ghab Plain and Maarrat Al-Nu'man, with preparations underway to complete the remaining houses in northern rural Aleppo. Karam Ali noted that Qatar Charity manages Bab al-Hawa Hospital and implements economic empowerment projects targeting poor families and orphan mothers through training and support for small businesses.

He underlined that Qatar Charity has started new projects in co-ordination with Syria's Ministries of Health and Education, printing schoolbooks for grades one through nine, renovating schools, and providing medicines and medical supplies. Plans are also underway to establish solar power stations and maintain water and sewage facilities, he added. Ali also explained that food security programmes remain a priority, focusing on supporting the wheat value chain and livestock, in addition to sponsoring and operating 12 health centres and supplying the ambulance system with 18 vehicles.

Head of QRCS's representation mission in Syria and Turkiye Mazen Abdullah Salloum told QNA that since 2012, the mission has provided a comprehensive response to the Syrian crisis across eight vital sectors, benefiting over 13mn people with total expenditures exceeding $160mn.

Salloum said that QRCS was the first humanitarian organisation to deliver relief aid across the border into Syria following the devastating earthquake, in co-ordination with Qatar Fund for Development, as aid was distributed both in Syria and Turkiye. Qatar Red Crescent also deployed medical convoys that performed more than 300 specialised surgeries and operated four mobile clinics serving displaced persons. Additionally, the Qatar Red Crescent established 15 residential villages in northern Syria comprising about 3,500 apartments benefiting over 60,000 people, alongside repairing hundreds of damaged homes, he added.

Plans are underway for additional restoration projects and the construction of new villages, aligned with government reconstruction efforts, he noted. Salloum emphasised that Qatar Red Crescent balances urgent relief with sustainable projects, including providing medicines and medical supplies, establishing cardiac catheterisation units and dialysis centers, supporting hospitals, building bakeries, and rehabilitating irrigation stations-all supported by the Qatar Fund for Development.

He expressed confidence that the State of Qatar will remain a key humanitarian partner for Syria and plans to expand work to more Syrian governorates as stability returns. For his part, President of the Syrian Arab Red Crescent Dr Mohammed Hazem Baqleh told QNA that co-operation with Qatar Red Crescent has notably developed since Dec 8 last year, including support for poor families with food baskets, conducting heart surgeries for children, and seasonal projects such as sacrificial offerings during Eid al-Adha and Ramadan support.

Baqleh noted that QRCS was active in emergency situations in southern Syria, supporting shelters with food baskets, adding that projects related to infrastructure and sustainable development are currently being prepared through joint meetings, paving the way for a memorandum of understanding covering most Syrian governorates.

Co-operation between the two sides also extends to digital technology in humanitarian work, following the Syrian Arab Red Crescent’s participation in a related conference in Qatar, Baqleh said, stressing that the next phase will see more partnerships and projects serving various Syrian regions.

Minister of Social Affairs and Labour Hind Kabawat expressed Syria's pride in its relationship with Qatar, praising the humanitarian, moral, and material support Qatar provides to the Syrian people.

She noted full co-ordination between the ministry and Qatari institutions to identify priorities and needs, with continuous exchange of expertise and reports. Co-operation programmes cover social protection, education, youth support, and small projects aimed at shifting from aid dependency to economic empowerment, along with vocational training projects and consultations on developing labor and protection laws.

This firm and principled Qatari commitment to the Syrian people emphasises Qatar's humanitarian and developmental role, moving from immediate relief to building resilience through sustainable projects, including residential villages, hospitals, agricultural and water resource support, and economic empowerment for families.

These efforts also reflect Qatari institutions' readiness to continue working in co-ordination with the Syrian government and local and international partners to meet the growing needs of the post-crisis phase, enhancing humanitarian security and opening pathways for the recovery in Syria.