UNITED NATIONS, May 29: UN aid chief Valerie Amos has made a final appeal to world powers to take action to end Syria’s four-year war, saying it had brought more despair than ever thought possible.
In her final report to the Security Council yesterday, Amos presented a list of atrocities, from the bombing of a market to attacks on medical facilities, blocked aid deliveries and the use of chlorine to terrorise civilians.
“For more than four years, we have watched Syria descend into deeper depths of despair, surpassing what even the most pessimistic observers thought possible,” said Amos.
“I know that there are no easy answers or quick fixes,” she told the 15-member council.
“We cannot leave Syrians abandoned to hopelessness and further despair.”
In the months leading up to her departure, Amos has repeatedly voiced frustration with the Security Council’s failure to unite behind measures to ease the suffering of civilians and chart a course for a political solution.
The British diplomat is stepping down after more than four years in one of the most challenging jobs at the United Nations as demands for humanitarian aid have surged in conflicts worldwide.
With more than 12.2 million people in urgent need of aid, Syria was the UN official’s top priority and Amos repeated that more needs to be done.
“For the sake of Syria and its future generations, this council must set aside its political differences and come together to find a solution to what appear to be intractable problems,” she said.
The death toll from the war has surpassed 220,000, but the Security Council has remained deadlocked over how to address the conflict despite three resolutions adopted last year.
Amos noted that 422,000 people are living under siege in Syria, under dire conditions, and that UN agencies and partner relief organisations have been unable to reach those in need.
She took a swipe at the council, saying that if such a figure had been envisaged at the start of the conflict, council members “would not have believed it possible.”
“Today we take it for granted,” she said.
UN peace envoy Staffan de Mistura opened consultations in Geneva earlier this month to gauge support for a full-fledged peace initiative after two previous UN efforts failed. (AGENCIES)