The Syrian governmental forces and their Russian allies have intensified their offensive on Idlib province since the end of 2019. Airstrikes and shelling have caused the displacement of hundreds of thousands of people who flee their home and desperately seek for a safe place. © MSF
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Conflict in Syria: As government forces move into Idlib, ‘people are facing a desperate situation’

In northwest Syria, airstrikes combined with a ground offensive conducted by Syrian government forces and their Russian allies have triggered a huge wave of displacement in the last opposition-held area in the country.

With towns and camps west of Aleppo hit by shelling in recent days, roads are packed with cars and trucks as people flee towards a shrinking area of safety. “People are facing a desperate situation,” says Julien Delozanne, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)’s head of mission for Syria.

“Attacks are now taking place in areas that were previously considered to be safe. The people fleeing north are being squeezed into a territory that is getting smaller and smaller, between the front line to the east and the closed Turkish border to the west. Living conditions in the camps for displaced people are already harsh. If the military operation continues, a new influx of people to the area will make the situation even worse.”

Syrian government forces have gained control of the highway connecting the cities of Damascus and Aleppo and are now pushing west, threatening densely populated areas to the west of Aleppo.

On February 14 and 15, shelling struck camps located around the town of Sarmadah, where tens of thousands of people fleeing the fighting in southern Idlib had recently arrived. Several people were wounded and some tents were destroyed. The town of Takad, some 20 km further east, has been hit a number of times since February 13, causing most of the town’s residents to flee.

Forced to flee

“Most people are fleeing Takad because of the recent attacks by artillery, missiles and warplanes,” says Mustafa Ajaj, director of the health centre supported by MSF in Takad. “The only people who have stayed are the ones who can’t afford a vehicle or don’t know where to go. We are moving our medical supplies to another location and I am looking for a safe place to resume our activities in an area where the medical needs are becoming more and more urgent. But we have left a few basic medical supplies for the people who are still in Takad.”

The hospital in the city of Al Atareb, which had received emergency kits from MSF, had to close on February 16 after attacks on the city. The hospital in Darat-Izaa also closed on February 17 for fear of being bombed. As a result, there is now no functioning hospital in rural west Aleppo province.

With the situation constantly changing, people in northern Idlib province and western Aleppo province – many of who have already been displaced repeatedly – are experiencing massive uncertainty. “No one knows what the situation will be tomorrow, only that there are bombings and that government forces are advancing,” says an MSF doctor working in Deir Hassan camp, 30 km west of Aleppo. “We live in fear and stress.”

Airstrikes and shelling have caused the displacement of hundreds of thousands of people who flee their home and desperately seek for a safe place.MSF

More than 875,000 people have been displaced within northwest Syria since December 1, 2019, according to the UN. Camps for displaced people are overwhelmed and finding a room to rent is reportedly impossible in towns at any distance from the bombing. With nowhere else to go, people are pitching tents on hillsides and roadsides or sleeping out in the open.

“There is death under the bombing, and there is another death in the camps – not immediate, but delayed,” said a displaced man who recently arrived with his family in one of the camps where MSF works.

“Whenever the bombing intensifies, new people are arriving,” says the MSF doctor in Deir Hassan camp. “Most people are unable to find shelter in the towns to which they flee, so they are forced to pitch their tents wherever they can. These areas are covered in tents, and the closer you get to the Turkish border, the more tents there are. Those who cannot afford a tent are sharing tents with other families. You also see people sitting on roadsides and under olive trees with blankets. Some fled with nothing more than the clothes they were wearing.”

‘Our situation is very bad’: Harsh conditions and little protection

Northern Idlib and western Aleppo provinces are now scattered with informal settlements, where displaced people are living in harsh conditions with little protection from the winter cold. Last week, temperatures fell below freezing and heavy snow blocked many roads. A family of four died of suffocation after burning poor quality fuel to heat their tent. “Our humanitarian situation is very bad,” a father told the MSF team during an aid distribution in a camp. “No heating. No bread. No water. We are burning the leaves of olive trees to get warm. We need support.”

Unsurprisingly, medical staff at MSF’s mobile clinic have treated many patients for respiratory infections as a result of their living conditions and the winter weather. The teams have also provided medical care to significant numbers of pregnant women and children in recent weeks.

MSF has also been responding to the needs of newly arrived people by distributing essential relief items in different locations in rural Idlib province. Since December 1, MSF teams have distributed blankets, winter clothes and hygiene kits to more than 13,000 people in more than 20 camps and informal settlements in Harim, Salqin, Sarmadah, Killi and Maarat Misrin, as well as heating materials to help people keep warm. MSF is also distributing drinking water to tens of thousands of people in camps. But people’s needs are huge and, even with all these new activities in place, it is increasingly hard for MSF to provide the displaced people with the assistance they need.

With the ground offensive and airstrikes continuing, people are constantly on the move. Some camps west of Aleppo were evacuated over the weekend. Those who can afford to pay for transport are heading north towards Afrin and Azaz, close to the Turkish border; others travel lesser distances. But wherever they go, no one can be sure that they will receive assistance.

“The war has been going on for nearly nine years,” says the MSF doctor, “but this year alone is equivalent to the past nine years if you consider all the difficulties we are living through.”