International donors yesterday pledged $6.0bn in aid for Syria this year at a conference overshadowed by a suspected deadly chemical attack blamed by the West on Damascus.
The Brussels meeting, co-chaired by the European Union and United Nations, was a follow-up to a meeting last year in London which raised $12bn (10.1bn euros) in all for humanitarian aid programmes.
“Our conference is sending a powerful message, we are not letting down the people of Syria,” EU Humanitarian Aid Commissioner Christos Stylianides told delegates.
Announcing the new pledges to applause from those at the meeting, he added: “Thank you so much. It is an impressive figure.”
Stylianides did not clarify if the funding was new, or if it included some funds previously pledged by the international community for war-torn Syria.
In London last year, donors put together two $6.0bn tranches in aid, one for 2016 and the other to cover the period to 2019.
The two-day Brussels meeting brought together some 70 countries and aid groups who also wanted to show support for UN-sponsored peace talks between the rebels and Russian-backed President Bashar al-Assad.
Yesterday’s session was dominated by news that at least 72 civilians including 20 children had been killed in a suspected chemical weapons attack on the rebel-held town of Khan Sheikhun in Idlib province.
UN chief Antonio Guterres said “the horrific events of yesterday demonstrate unfortunately that war crimes are going on in Syria.”
“This conference must represent a moment of truth where the international community” finally comes together to settle the war and give the Syrian people hope, he said.
British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson told delegates it was “impossible for us to ignore the horrific attack” and pointed the finger of blame firmly at Damascus.
Johnson and other delegates repeatedly urged all parties to the conflict and their backers to condemn the attack and the use of chemical weapons.
The war has claimed more than 320,000 lives since anti-Assad protests descended into a full-blown civil war in 2011, with five million Syrians fleeing the country and most of the remaining population being displaced.
Most of the refugees have ended up in Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan. The UN warned Tuesday that the plight of the refugees was becoming “desperate,” with only 433mn euros out of a needed 4.7bn euros pledged so far.
The UN estimated another 3.4bn euros was needed for humanitarian aid in Syria.Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri urged donors to “invest in peace.”
“Ladies and gentlemen, the current situation in Lebanon is a ticking time-bomb,” he told the conference.
The Brussels conference was not meant to address the key sticking point of Assad’s future role in the Geneva talks.
The rebels and their backers demand that Assad stand down but Moscow and Tehran show no sign of abandoning their long-time ally.
EU foreign affairs chief Federica Mogherini admitted it was “surreal especially today” to be discussing the “post-conflict situation.”
“But if you want peace you have to start building peace and the conditions for peace”, she said, urging a “strong push to the political talks in Geneva.”
Delegates made clear that aid for reconstruction would not be forthcoming until there was a genuine political transition to a new Syrian government without Assad.
“Our public will not accept that their money go in any way to those responsible for these crimes,” Johnson said, referring to the Idlib attack.


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