What’s the magic word? Humanitarian access and local organisations in Syria
[2023-08-22 05:22:51]
Syria's conflict is about to come to the end of the sixth year. Not to mention peace, the prospect of political transition is still difficult to achieve. Currently, 13.5 million Syrians need humanitarian aid, 8 million people are leaving the country and 3 million people evacuate in the country.
Since the beginning of the conflict, access to humanitarian institutions to provide aid and protection to people who need it, or to lack more precisely was a decisive problem. Many discussions on access have focused on "formal" systems (the United Nations, the International Red Cross Committee (ICRC), international non-governmental organizations). This can be understood by considering the number of entities making up the system, experience, and specific tasks and tasks. At the same time, however, the conflict highlighted the role of local organizations, diaspora groups, local councils and other organizations. These organizations have filled in the gaps left by careless and limited international presence and have provided aid and protection.
In this survey we will look at how different local organizations respond to access challenges, the strategies they use, and how they are dealing with ethical and operational dilemmas.
At the same time, "informal" systems grew exponentially. According to the United Nations Office for Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), the number of different local NGOs providing various relief activities in Syria - various specialized agencies, diaspora groups, faith groups, and combat groups or activists - From the year 2015 to the first 12 people increased to 600 to 700 people, about a fifth of them living in Syria. Many foreign organizations start in a temporary way, but the expertise of that method and resources will soon increase. In Somalia, there are cases where various types of business people play an important role to satisfy the relief needs of those affected by the conflict.
Since the beginning of the conflict, access to humanitarian institutions to provide aid and protection to people who need it, or to lack more precisely was a decisive problem. Many discussions on access have focused on "formal" systems (the United Nations, the International Red Cross Committee (ICRC), international non-governmental organizations). This can be understood by considering the number of entities making up the system, experience, and specific tasks and tasks. At the same time, however, the conflict highlighted the role of local organizations, diaspora groups, local councils and other organizations. These organizations have filled in the gaps left by careless and limited international presence and have provided aid and protection.
Iraqi civil society and government organizations are safer and more harmonious, despite the fact that armed groups block tensions between humanitarian access, bureaucratic restrictions, Baghdad and Erbil, and domestic and international charities I am striving for prosperity. Build the foundation for a desired future. They know that interworking of problems leads to a virtuous circle of solutions.