UNSC discusses situation in Syria after earthquakes
A machinery operates at the site of damaged buildings in the aftermath of an earthquake, in opposition-held town of Harem, Syria Feb. 13, 2023. (Reuters Photo)


The U.N. Security Council held a closed-door meeting on Monday to boost humanitarian assistance to Syria following two major earthquakes that devastated the already-struggling northwest, amid calls to open a new border gate to transfer aid.

The meeting requested by Switzerland and Brazil -- the United Nations co-leaders on the Syria humanitarian file — will feature a presentation to council members by U.N. humanitarian affairs chief Martin Griffiths, who this weekend visited Türkiye and Syria where anger over the pace of aid has swelled.

But even before the session, his message was clear.

"We have so far failed the people in north-west Syria," Griffiths said Sunday on Twitter.

"They rightly feel abandoned," he said, adding that it was the international community's obligation "to correct this failure as fast as we can."

The magnitude 7.7 and 7.6 quakes that struck Syria and Türkiye on Feb. 6 have so far killed more than 35,000 people and left communities in both countries desperate for emergency help.

Before the earthquake struck, almost all of the crucial humanitarian aid for the more than four million people living in opposition-controlled areas of northwestern Syria was being delivered from Türkiye through the Bab al-Hawa crossing.

This is thanks to a cross-border mechanism created in 2014 by a U.N. resolution, contested by the Assad regime but also by Moscow, a permanent Security Council member with veto power, which has sought in recent years to reduce the number of crossings from four to one.

Aid delivery through Bab al-Hawa was interrupted by the quake but has since resumed, and calls to open other crossings are multiplying.

"People in the affected areas are counting on us," Washington's U.N. ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield said Sunday in a statement.

"We must vote immediately on a resolution to heed the U.N.'s call for authorization of additional border crossings for the delivery of humanitarian assistance."

Malta's U.N. ambassador Vanessa Frazier, who chairs the 15-member Security Council this month, said members have yet to begin formal discussions on a resolution, "but I'm sure that we will."

"We are doing our job," she said, when asked about criticism that the council was acting too slowly.

"There's no point in meeting for us without the information" coming from experts on the ground, Frazier added.