Syria: Aid convoys reach starvation-plagued Madaya - Action News
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Syria: Aid convoys reach starvation-plagued Madaya

Emergency aid convoys have arrived in Madaya, Syria, where 40,000 people have received no food since October, while surrounded by forces loyal to the Assad regime.

Food aid reaches starving Syrians

9 years ago
Duration 7:29
As food aid is delivered to starving Syrians, Red Cross director of operations Dominik Stillhart describes how the convoy reached Madaya, and decries the 'medieval' tactic of using food as a weapon of war.

At least three trucks bringing food and medicine to thebesieged Syrian town of Madaya, near the Lebanese border, have entered the town.The humanitarian aid is part of a large-scale UN-supported aid operation in the war-ravaged country.

An aid convoy is to simultaneously enter the Shiavillages of Foua and Kfarya in Idlib province, under siege by rebels seeking to oust President Basharal-Assad.

An Associated Press crew on the outskirts of Madaya said three trucks crossed into the town Monday evening.

A group of residents gathered at the main entrance to Madaya, hoping to receive desperately needed food and medicine. The town, about 24 kilometresnorthwest of Damascus, has been blockaded for months by government troops and the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah. Opposition activists and aid groups have reported several deaths from starvation in recent weeks.

The UN-supported aid operation was agreed on last week.Syria's Red Crescent President Abdul Rahman Attar said the convoy reached the outskirts of Madaya shortly after midday, according to a statement posted on the organization's Twitter account.

A similar convoy reached the outskirts of the Shiavillages of Foua and Kfarya in Idlib province, both under siege by rebels seeking to oust President Basharal-Assad

Hezbollah, which is fighting in Syria alongside Assad's forces, reported on its Al-Manar television channel that 40 trucks were expected to enter the northern villages, with another 40 headed to Madaya.

'Our children are dying of hunger'

The situation in Madaya is the latest example of both sides using hunger as a weapon in Syria's war, now in its fifth year.

The town has attracted particular attention in recent days because of reports of deaths and images of severely malnourished residents that have circulated across social media.

The images prompted a media war two weeks ahead of a new round of peace talks between the government and opposition expected to take place in Geneva.

GRAPHIC WARNING: Humanitarian crisis in Syrian town

9 years ago
Duration 1:16
Images of starving children emerge on social media

Some government supporters have used social media to mock the photos, saying they were fake, while others claimed it was the rebels who were withholding food from needy residents.

The aid group Doctors Without Borders says 23 patients have died of starvation at a health centre it supports in Madaya since Dec. 1 including six infants under oneyear of age and five adults over the age of 60.

Yacoub El Hillo, the UN's resident and humanitarian coordinator in Syria, said almost 42,000 people in Madaya are at risk of further hunger and starvation.

A Red Cross aid convoy waits on the outskirts of Madaya on Monday. (Louai Beshara/AFP/Getty Images)

In Madaya, Al-Manar showed a group of people including women and children waiting for the convoys at the town's main entrance. In interviews, they accused fighters inside of hoarding humanitarian assistance that entered the town in October and selling them to residents at exorbitant prices.

"Our children are dying of hunger," a school teacher told the station, saying she walked to the entrance of the town to make sure she received the assistance directly.

The UN's World Food Program has said it will ship one month's worth of food for more than 40,000 people to Madaya from Damascus, and enough for 20,000 people to Foua and Kfarya from the city of Homs.

Iran reasserts support for Syrian government

And in the northern village of Kafranbel, two prominent activists were released after being detained by the extremist Nusra Front.

A boy and his family, who received permission from the Syrian government to leave the besieged town, wait to depart, after aid trucks entered Madaya. (Omar Sanadiki/Reuters)

The two men, Raed Fares and Hadi Abdullah, were abducted by Nusra, al-Qaeda's Syrian affiliate, in an early morning raid Sunday that saw their opposition radio station, Radio Fresh, shut down.

The Observatory, which relies on a network of activists and other sources inside Syria, reported their release some 12 hours later. The release was also noted on the station's social media pages.

In Damascus, Iran's interior minister, Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli, reasserted his country's support for Syria at a joint press conference with his Syrian counterpart, Mohammad al-Shaar.

"The Syrian government has demanded our support against terrorism and we, anyway, stood alongside [President Bashar]Assad, who enjoys his people's support," he said. "We see the conditions in Syria are moving forward in a good way."