For most
Syrians, the coming of winter and Scud missiles crossing the skies from one city to another enlist
the same horror, as houses exposed to daily shelling no longer have any windows. And, whatever glass
was not shattered by shrapnel has been removed by its owners to avoid further
destruction. Electricity is a bygone commodity as it has been cut off in
rebel-held areas for more than a year. Few people can afford the cost of fuel and if the previous
winter is any indication, they know that it will be available only in rare
cases. Olive trees hundreds of years old are being cut across Damascus’
besieged Ghouta region to be used as fuel for wood stoves. In other non-forested areas under attack,
people will be spared the guilt of wasting a national treasure like olive trees, but they will find
no means to keep even a little bit warm. We heard many stories last year about people burning
whatever is left of their wooden furniture in quest of some warmth for their
children. Some besieged areas, like the Yarmouk camp, Hajar al-Aswad, and
Maadhamiyah, are already threatened with humanitarian disaster in the very near future due to the
almost total lack of food and medical supplies, and the literally airtight siege on them. Add to
that the coming winter, and one can only imagine the slow and harsh death awaiting children, as well
as the elderly and the sick in these areas. The coming months will be worse than the previous
winter. Fuel was scarce then, but there was still some possibility to bring aid into rebel areas,
including food, clothing, and medication. Sieges are even more
destructive when coupled with Syria's changing seasons. Winter is coming, and many are unprepared
for the cold months ahead. Worse, the international community has failed to confront the Syrian
regime's decision to step over its fictitious "red line." When will the
international community put Syria's besieged regions on its list of negotiations with the regime
(instead of focusing solely on removing its chemical arsenal)? It might help to repeat that death by
war, famine, and sickness is no less cruel than a speedy death by choking on sarin
gas. The world must tell the Assad regime it will not negotiate the
removal of chemical weapons (and avoidance of the presumed military strike) until after the arrival
of aid convoys sent by the Red Cross or others to the besieged areas. Or would that be a waste of
time for the international community’s efforts to remove the chemical menace? Does the upcoming
humanitarian disaster on the threshold of winter not deserve a try, at least for the sake of
international hypocrisy?
This article is
a translation from the original Arabic.
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