Syria facing 'massacre' on a scale never seen before, UN warns
A UN official says shelling by the Assad regime could cause a "massacre" of displaced Syrians.
Thursday 20 February 2020 17:11, UK
The UN is warning an unprecedented聽bloodbath is looming in northwest Syria without international action to restrain the Assad regime.
Regime forces backed by Russia are advancing into Idlib and now shelling areas where displaced Syrians are camped.
UN Deputy Regional Humanitarian Co-ordinator for Syria, Mark Cutts, told Sky News that even by this war's brutal standards, the situation is now desperate.
"There are about a million displaced people living in camps and makeshift shelters in that area and if the shelling and airstrikes move any further in that area we're going to see a bloodbath," he said.
"We're going to see a massacre on a scale that has never been seen in this entire war."
The UN says Idlib is already facing a humanitarian crisis of unprecedented proportions.
It says more than 900,000 people have been forced to flee their homes or camps since the start of December, most of them women and children.
Mr Cutts added: "If you compare this with the Rohingya crisis in 2017; there were 700,000 people that moved at one time. The whole world was outraged by what was happening there.
"What we are seeing here is on a scale that we haven't seen for the whole of the Syrian war, which has been going on for nine years now.
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"We need political action to take place at the highest level in the security council to stop this happening."
The challenge is overwhelming aid agencies and their workers.
Mr Cutts had just chaired a meeting of aid workers where the strains were all too visible.
"I had men and women in this meeting crying. The translator broke down into tears explaining what is going on in the area. They are absolutely desperate," he said.
In previous crises elsewhere in the world, the UN Security Council has intervened, enforcing a ceasefire.
But Russia, a UN Security Council permanent member, has used its power to veto action throughout Syria's civil war.
The Assad regime and its Russian allies seem determined to continue their military advance into Idlib regardless of international condemnation.
They are squeezing a traumatised and desperate population into a smaller and smaller area that has become a killing zone.
The Syrian conflict may be approaching its end game, but the civilian suffering may not have yet reached its nadir.