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WILLIAM BRANGHAM: This month, a Russian veto at the United Nations
Security Council led to the closure of a U.N.-operated border crossing.
That crossing was the gateway that supplied vital humanitarian aid
to rebel-held parts of Northwest Syria. The Syrian regime now says
all deliveries will be coordinated through Damascus and not the U.N.
But with this closure, more than four million Syrians,
most of whom are internally displaced, have lost access to crucial humanitarian aid.
John Yang has more.
JOHN YANG: In a tent city in Northwest Syria, an entire generation born into war, children who
have only known life in the narrow lanes of this camp and who learn to live with the bare minimum.
At the Atalrama (ph) camp, Khaled Ahmed Hajj feeds his children what
little he can. They dip bread in oil and thyme, the six of them eating from
a single small plate. They have not had meat, fruit or vegetables for months.
KHALED AHMED HAJJ, Syrian Camp Resident (through translator): There are no job
opportunities for us to work. There's nothing. Even bread and thyme, we can barely buy.
My children are malnourished. My baby needs food, milk, fruits, and protein.
JOHN YANG: Hajj says the closure of the U.N.-operated border crossing at Bab al-Hawa
on the Turkish border will block aid to his camp. That, he says, amounts to a death sentence.
KHALED AHMED HAJJ (through translator): The closure of the crossing will cause us to suffocate
and starve to death. The camps depend only on U.N. aid, and closing the crossing means killing us.
JOHN YANG: Next door, Mohammad Hasram tries to cool his tent with water. It's over
100 degrees on most summer days. His youngest child can't bear it.
MOHAMMAD HASRAM, Syrian Camp Resident (through translator): There's little
water here. We use some of it to cool the tent. Look at this
dilapidated tent and other conditions. The picture speaks louder than words.
JOHN YANG: Hasram came here after fleeing Homs. Once known as the capital of the Syrian
revolution, Homs has long been reduced to rubble by the regime of Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad.
Today, Hasram faces another battle, keeping his children alive.
MOHAMMAD HASRAM (through translator): No one looks at our situation and no one helps. We
depend on U.N. aid. We used to get some aid, but now it's completely cut off. If
it continues to be stopped, life here will stop. This is a food war on us.
JOHN YANG: The Bab al-Hawa crossing was the last remaining humanitarian corridor
between Turkey and the rebel-held Idlib province.
It closed earlier this month after Russia vetoed a U.N. Security Council resolution,
a move that angered many Syrians in the region.
ABDUL KAFI AL-HAMDO, Air Worker: Syrian regime and Russians have used the food
weapon for years against civilians. We want to say for the whole world that you
shouldn't wait until seeing people dying out of hunger, out of lack of
food and any humanitarian assistance. People in Northwest Syria have been suffering for years.
JOHN YANG: Now the Syrian regime wants to control aid delivery into
these rebel-held territories through Damascus.
Charles Lister is a senior fellow and director of the Syria and Countering
Terrorism and Extremism Programs at the Middle East Institute.
CHARLES LISTER, Middle East Institute: The Syrian regime, who have spent 12 years besieging, gassing
and killing hundreds of thousands of Syrians, now gets to claim to the international community that
it's willing to provide humanitarian access, it is willing to open a border crossing.
The rate of humanitarian aid provision into Northwestern
Syria will unquestionably collapse significantly.
JOHN YANG: Lister said an average of 12,000 aid trucks had passed through
the U.N. crossing each year. But on the Assad-controlled routes,
since 2021, only a total of 152 trucks have delivered, an average of only 74 a year.
CHARLES LISTER: The regime would in most cases simply refuse to allow the aid in at all. And
all across Syria over the past 12 years, there have been towns and cities where people have
been eating grass, have been eating mud, in desperation because they have no aid.
On the few occasions in those historical cases where the regime did allow small amounts of aid
in, they were then in the practice whereby the Syrian regime would -- for example,
they put shards of glass inside shipments of flour. They put bird feces inside baby formula.
JOHN YANG: Health officials say the crossing's closure will have a devastating effect on the
health care system. It's already crippled by February's twin earthquakes that destroyed
medical facilities, killed medical staff and damaged equipment that has yet to be replaced.
Now, with the border crossing closed, more than half of Northwest Syria's
remaining hospitals are at risk of shutting down.
Dr. Zuhair Karat is head of the Idlib Health Directorate.
DR. ZUHAIR KARAT, Idlib Health Directorate (through translator): The cessation of aid
entry will lead to great damage to the health sector and will lead to
the closure of these facilities. We are heading for a major health disaster.
JOHN YANG: That would compound an already dire humanitarian crisis. And
until the international community comes up with a solution,
millions of displaced Syrians are looking toward a grim future.
For the "PBS NewsHour," I'm John Yang.