Syria civil war: Bombs hit Daraya after aid delivery

Crude barrel bombs have been dropped on a suburb of the Syrian capital Damascus, which received its first food-aid delivery in four years, according to the Local Council of Daraya.

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The reported violence on Friday came in the rebel-held area just hours after the Syrian Arab Red Crescent (SARC) and the UN delivered food aid to its residents for the first time since it came under siege in 2012.

Writing on Facebook, the Local Council of Daraya said that at least 28 barrel bombs - crude, unguided explosive devices - were dropped.

Late on Thursday, the food-aid delivery came after the UN said the Syrian government had permitted access to 15 of the 19 besieged areas within the country.

Daraya has been under siege since November 2012 and has witnessed some of the worst bombardment during Syria's civil war, now in its sixth year.

The delivery of food supplies came a week after a joint convoy of the UN, the International Committee of the Red Cross and SARC reached Daraya and delivered medicine, vaccines, baby formula, and "nutritional items for children" but no food.

The UN estimates that there are currently 592,700 people living under siege in Syria, with the vast majority of them - about 452,700 people - besieged by government forces.

Lifting the siege on rebel-held areas was a key demand by the opposition during indirect peace talks held in Geneva, Switzerland, earlier this year.

SARC said the delivery - which included food, flour and medical supplies - was coordinated with the UN in Damascus.

'One meal per day'

In a video posted online by media activists in Daraya, an official with the UN's World Food Programme (WFP) said the organisation had delivered about 480 food rations that would feed around 2,400 individuals for a month.

The official said he had met some beneficiaries of the food aid and community leaders.

"The supply of the very basic commodities is very challenging, so as a consequence the prices of the commodities themselves are very high whenever they are available," he said.

"As a result, most families are having to do with one meal, which is not complete as a meal, per day in order to be able to get by."

An amateur video posted online showed UN 4x4 vehicles and white SARC trucks driving through sand barriers in the dark until they were met by opposition fighters.

Photographs posted online by activists in the suburb showed UN and SARC officials meeting local dignitaries and men removing WFP boxes from a white truck.

According to photographs posted by local activists, among those joining the convoy into Daraya were Yacoub El Hillo, UN humanitarian coordinator for Syria, and Khawla Mattar, a spokeswoman for Staffan de Mistura, the UN special envoy to Syria.

The UN estimates that 4,000 to 8,000 people live in Daraya, which has been subject to a government blockade since residents expelled security forces in the early stages of the 2011 uprising against President Bashar al-Assad.

 

Credit: Aljazeera

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