Islamic Relief is scaling up food and medical aid to civilians in Aleppo and Idlib as fighting rages across northwest Syria amid the biggest escalation in the country for several years. Our aid workers there report intense attacks throughout the day and an Islamic Relief-supported health centre has been hit by airstrikes and forced to close.
Food and medical supplies in Aleppo are running short, and Islamic Relief is sending 140 tonnes of flour so that bakeries can continue to operate and feed the population. The charity also plans to send health workers and dialysis kits to support overwhelmed medical facilities that are now bursting with civilian casualties. The escalation of violence has forced many private hospitals to close.
In Idlib, Islamic Relief is running mobile health clinics for civilians who are under ongoing attack. An Islamic Relief-supported health centre in Idlib – the only one of its kind in northwest Syria – has been damaged by the continuous fighting and has temporarily shut. The centre carries out dozens of surgeries a month free of charge.
Rajab Haj Salem, Islamic Relief’s head of office in Idlib, said:
“Artillery is striking Idlib city centre every 30 minutes at times, and the most heavily populated areas of Aleppo and Idlib are under attack.
“I have already been forced to abandon my own home in Idlib as the area has come under fire. I’ve seen a seven-storey building levelled by an airstrike and the university hospital is under ongoing attack, with an airstrike hitting around it today.
“If this shelling continues then there will be a massive wave displacement to the countryside.”
Civilians in Aleppo are reporting growing shortages of essential supplies. In Idlib, food, fuel and health services are currently still available, but after more than 13 years of crisis unemployment is high and people don’t have money to buy essentials.
The crisis in northwest Syria has been building for months but has rapidly escalated in recent days. This is the first time since 2016 that fighting has raged inside the city of Aleppo, which was home to 4 million people.
Islamic Relief is calling for civilians and civilian infrastructure such as hospitals and schools to be protected.
Notes
Islamic Relief has worked in northwest Syria since 2013. Last year our work there supported more than 1.7 million people with humanitarian and development aid including healthcare, shelter and livelihoods support.