Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

$229 million in aid for Syria, refugees: Sajjan

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 May, 2022 10:26 AM
  • $229 million in aid for Syria, refugees: Sajjan

OTTAWA - Canada is giving $229 million in aid for Syria and neighbouring nations hosting refugees from the war-torn state.

The aid package includes $169 million for food, clean water and hygiene and health services, as well as support for women facing sexual and domestic violence.

International Development Minister Harjit Sajjan announced the funding as Canada takes part in an international conference in Brussels on finding a political solution to the conflict in Syria.

The conflict, which has been waging for more than 10 years, followed a violent crackdown by the Assad regime on pro-democracy demonstrations in 2011, which escalated into civil war.

The aid package will also help Lebanon, Jordan and Iraq, where many Syrian refugees have fled President Bashar Assad's Moscow-backed regime.

Some of the aid will help buy grain for the region, which usually relies on wheat from Ukraine as a staple food source.

But the conflict and blocking of Ukraine's ports by Russian troops has put their wheat supply in jeopardy. Ukraine has warned that Russian troops have been looting its grain stores while men who would have planted the next crop and brought in the harvest are fighting the Russians at the front.

Ukraine is also a major exporter of sunflower oil, which is also imported by countries in the Middle East.

Canada's aid is to be funnelled through the United Nations and international aid agencies, including the Red Cross and Red Crescent, and not through Assad's regime, a spokesman for Sajjan said.

Canada has earmarked $60 million for development assistance, focusing on "empowering women and girls" and advancing gender equality, and social services supports for women.

“As we enter another year of conflict in Syria, millions of people still require urgent help. From providing clean water and nourishing food to providing support for sexual and reproductive health and rights, Canada will be there for those who have been impacted by this conflict," Sajjan said in a statement.

"We must work to end this terrible humanitarian disaster.”

The civil war in Syria has claimed over 350,000 lives, over 27,000 of whom were children, the United Nations has said.

But the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a U.K.-based monitoring group, estimates that the actual death toll exceeds 600,000, saying thousands have died of torture in government-run prisons.

Assad's regime is backed by Russian President Vladimir Putin, who provided the Syrian president with Russian military help, including with the bombardment of opposition-held areas.

The Syrian leader is one of the few worldwide to have expressed support for Putin's invasion of Ukraine.

MORE National ARTICLES

Officials brace for busy border-crossing season

Officials brace for busy border-crossing season
U.S. border officials also seem to be seeing more people trying to cross in the opposite direction. 6 Indian nationals were rescued from a boat sinking on the St. Regis River in northern New York late last month, part of what court documents allege was a human smuggling operation.

Officials brace for busy border-crossing season

Male dies in Coquitlam after stabbing, IHIT deployed

Male dies in Coquitlam after stabbing, IHIT deployed
While the investigation is still in the early stages, investigators confirm one person is in custody at this point. Although one person has been arrested, police continue to treat this investigation as active and ongoing to determine the circumstances, states Corporal Paige Kuz, Coquitlam RCMP Media Relations Officer.    

Male dies in Coquitlam after stabbing, IHIT deployed

Man assaulted and killed in Crab park over the weekend

Man assaulted and killed in Crab park over the weekend
VPD officers were called to Crab Park around 10.20 a.m. Saturday for reports of one man being assaulted. Andrew Wadden, a 45-year-old Vancouver resident, was found by police in the park with life-threatening injuries.

Man assaulted and killed in Crab park over the weekend

B.C. money laundering report gets extension

B.C. money laundering report gets extension
The B.C. government says in a statement the report's submission had previously been due May 20, but the extension is a result of several members of the Cullen Commission inquiry team contracting COVID-19.

B.C. money laundering report gets extension

April jobless rate falls to another new low

April jobless rate falls to another new low
The unemployment rate came in at 5.2 per cent for April compared with the previous record low of 5.3 per cent set in March. Bank of Montreal chief economist Doug Porter said the moderate gain in employment is a sign of much more normal conditions, but also one where the supply of new workers may be beginning to be the binding constraint on growth.

April jobless rate falls to another new low

PHAC tries to get idea of how many have long COVID

PHAC tries to get idea of how many have long COVID
The Public Health Agency of Canada and Statistics Canada have launched a survey to try to get a broad idea of how common it is for people to feel lingering effects after COVID-19 infection, which can be difficult to identify and even harder to track.

PHAC tries to get idea of how many have long COVID