The Least We Can Do For Syria
APR 17, 2015
LONDON – Over the
past four years, Syria has been the scene of terrible suffering and
savagery. But the recent assault on the Yarmouk Palestinian refugee camp
in Damascus by Daesh (Islamic State) fighters has shocked and appalled
even the most hardened observers.
The capture of the
camp leaves 18,000 refugees at risk of slaughter, unable to access food,
water, and vital services. Conditions there – according to Christopher
Gunness, a spokesman for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for
Palestine Refugees in the Near East – are “beyond inhumane.” The attack reminds us once again that Syria’s agony can be ended only by concerted international action.
When protests against
President Bashar al-Assad’s authoritarian regime first broke out in
2011, few could have imagined the catastrophe that Syria would suffer.
The war has claimed more than 200,000 lives and devastated Syria’s
social and economic fabric.
The conflict has led
to atrocities on all sides, including mass executions, kidnapping,
torture, the use of chemical weapons, and the deployment of barrel
bombs. Some 12 million people have fled their homes, and many have left
the country altogether, placing a heavy burden on neighboring states
like Lebanon and Jordan. More than three million children are no longer
in school.
The international
community has been unable – and, to some extent, unwilling – to stop the
war or end Syria’s suffering. Former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan
and I have had first-hand experience of the crisis. We both tried to
bring the combatants to the negotiating table and end the killing. And
we both failed.
In the meantime, the
world took far too long to wake up to the global danger posed by Daesh.
It will take more than the ongoing bombing campaign to end the group’s
atrocities in Syria and Iraq. A comprehensive resolution of the conflict
is urgently needed. But this will be possible only if the main regional
players – Iran, Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey – work with the
international community to generate the political will to act.
Unfortunately, there are few signs that such cooperation will happen
anytime soon.
The responsibility
for our collective failure and inaction is not confined to international
diplomats and policymakers; it is shared by all of us. And yet too many
people, confronted by such vast suffering, have become numb and
apathetic. It is vital that, no matter how grim or upsetting the
situation in Syria becomes, we do not tune it out or simply seek to turn
the page.
Nowhere is this more
apparent than in the terrible spectacle of thousands of Syrian refugees,
crammed into rickety vessels, attempting to cross the Mediterranean
Sea. In the past year, some 4,000 men, women, and children have lost
their lives in this perilous crossing. But this has not deterred
thousands of others from risking the same journey and putting their
lives in the hands of human traffickers and criminal gangs.
Incredibly, the European Union’s response
to the drowning deaths in the Mediterranean has been to cut the budget
for the naval response unit charged with monitoring refugee crossings
and rescuing shipwreck survivors. This not only flies in the face of
morality; it is also counterproductive.
The current focus on
border security has resulted in inadequate, uncoordinated, and poorly
designed policies that force migrants to resort to illegal and dangerous
channels. And yet national governments throughout the EU, it seems, are
too afraid of – or too beholden to – anti-immigrant sentiment among
their electorates to show common humanity to refugees.
In a conflict as
bitter, protracted, and complex as the war in Syria, it is all too easy
to become overwhelmed by despair. Some international broadcasters have
even found that their audience share drops when they delve into the
conflict. It can be difficult for ordinary citizens to feel hopeful when
governments and international institutions have been unable to stop the
war and refuse to protect refugees.
The Algerian-born
French author Albert Camus wrote, “In such a world of conflict, victims,
and executioners, it is the job of thinking people, not to be on the
side of the executioners.” It is in this spirit that I call on people
around the world to pressure their governments to implement policies
that protect and shelter Syrian war refugees. Taking care of those
displaced by the conflict is the least we can do. For the world’s sake,
the Syrian people must not be forgotten.
Lakhdar Brahimi, a former foreign minister of Algeria and United Nations and Arab League Special Envoy to Syria
No comments:
Post a Comment