Refugee aid urged at Jordan's border

60,000 stranded, medical charity says

In this Tuesday, June 28, 2016 photo, Syrian refugees gather for water at Ruqban border camp in northeast Jordan. Syrian refugees and international aid officials say little water and no food has reached 64,000 Syrian refugees stranded in the desert since Jordan sealed its border in response to a suicide attack on June 21, 2016.
In this Tuesday, June 28, 2016 photo, Syrian refugees gather for water at Ruqban border camp in northeast Jordan. Syrian refugees and international aid officials say little water and no food has reached 64,000 Syrian refugees stranded in the desert since Jordan sealed its border in response to a suicide attack on June 21, 2016.

AMMAN, Jordan -- Tens of thousands of Syrians stranded on the Jordanian border face starvation and dehydration, the aid group Doctors Without Borders said Thursday, calling for an immediate resumption of aid deliveries that were halted after Jordan sealed the border after a suicide attack.

The international community must eventually relocate the more than 60,000 Syrians trapped in the remote desert near the border to safe countries, the group said, adding that Jordan cannot be expected to shoulder the responsibility alone. Abandoning displaced Syrians in the border area or sending them back to war-ravaged Syria are unacceptable options, the group said.

"We see this as a collective responsibility and as a consequence we also see this as a collective failure of the international community to do its duty," said Benoit De Gryse, operations manager at the group.

Jordan sealed the border area, known as the berm because of an earthen mound marking the frontier, after a June 21 suicide attack. The car bomb, claimed by the Islamic State extremist group, killed seven Jordanian troops and wounded 13.

Jordan signaled it would not lift the closure.

"The security of our country and Jordanians is the government's top priority," government spokesman Mohammed Momani said. "Therefore, the border remains a close military area."

He said the refugees at the berm are an international problem but that Jordan is willing to help.

De Gryse said the situation at the berm is very critical and "getting worse day by day," with people currently receiving only an average of a little more than 1.5 quarts of water per person per day -- far below the required amount.

About half of those stranded in the desert are children, he said.

"The people live in an environment where the temperature currently rises to [104 Fahrenheit]," he said. "There are sandstorms, there is no vegetation to provide shelter. The tents are often makeshift or extremely flimsy, offering no protection from the sun and the wind."

"If this continues like it is now, we will soon see starvation, dehydration and we will be confronted with preventable deaths at the berm," he added.

Nearly 5 million Syrians have fled their homeland since 2011, including more than 650,000 who settled in Jordan.

Since early 2016, populations in two tent encampments on the Jordanian border have grown fourfold. The bottleneck is a result of more Syrians fleeing and stringent Jordanian security checks, over fears that Islamic State extremists posing as refugees will try to seek entry to Jordan.

In recent months, aid groups have started distributing food, water and bread from the Jordanian side.

From mid-May until the border closure, Doctors Without Borders operated clinics from the backs of trucks and said it was able to treat about 3,200 patients. This included delivering a baby in a truck and referring several critical patients to hospitals in Jordan.

A Section on 07/01/2016

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