MAIN » News Bulletin of April 2024 – Coalition of Civil Society Organizations in North and East Syria (CSO–NES)

News Bulletin of April 2024 – Coalition of Civil Society Organizations in North and East Syria (CSO–NES)

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News of CSO–NES

The CSO-NES began April with a Health Forum in the city of Qamishli, under the title “The Reality of the Health Sector in Northern and Eastern Syria.” This was part of the educational and research activities of the CSO-NES, which included a series of forums on the health, agriculture, and education sectors.

The forum included presentations, discussions, and recommendations on the needs, assessments, and challenges related to the health sector in NES. It started with a research report prepared by Dr. Kasar Ali, based on multiple meetings and sessions held in the regions of NES.

The following week, the Education Forum for NES took place in Qamishli, under the title “The Reality of the Education Sector in Northern and Eastern Syria.” It began with a research report prepared by Dr. Ahmed Abu Shakir, also based on multiple meetings and sessions held in the regions of NES. The report discussed the educational situation, highlighting the challenges, difficulties, strengths, and interventions needed to improve and support this sector.

In the same context, a press conference was held following the three forums on health, agriculture, and education.
In mid-April, the Local Board and the General Board convened for a two-day meeting in Qamishli. The purpose of the meeting was to evaluate the three implemented forums (agriculture, health, and education), discuss the internal system of the coalition, and make proposals for the General Conference, including the selection of a preparatory committee for the conference.
During the third week of the same month, the CSO-NES held a session with a group of active women in civil society. The aim was to amplify their voices through recommendations directed towards the 8th Brussels Conference on supporting the future of Syria and the region. The session focused on the current and future issues, challenges, and aspirations of women in NES.
Statements of the CSO-NES:
130 Syrian Organizations Urge Donors at Brussels VIII Conference to Prioritize Urgent Humanitarian Issues in Northeast Syria
Syrian organizations signing this statement call on the international actors at the Conference to adopt a more inclusive humanitarian approach, place pressing humanitarian issues and needs in northeast Syria at the core of discussions, and support efforts of recovery to cease the wave of emigration and enhance stability.
On April 30, 2024, Brussels will host the Day of Dialogue, involving Syrian civil society as one of the events of Brussels VIII Conference on Syria, organized annually by the European Union, and aiming at raising funds and allocate them to humanitarian support projects for Syrians. The Conference is an annual opportunity to reiterate the ethical duty towards the ongoing humanitarian plight that has persisted for over 13 years due to the conflict in Syria, and the shape of international engagement. It also ensures that humanitarian assistance is not politicized or diverted in ways that exacerbate the already fragile humanitarian conditions.
The Brussels VIII Conference, this year, comes at a time when areas of northeastern Syria are experiencing unprecedented dire humanitarian conditions, owing to the damage left by a series of Turkish deliberate and repeated airstrikes against the crumbling infrastructure, energy facilities, and objects indispensable to the survival of the civilian population. Such actions constitute a clear violation of international humanitarian law, according to the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic (COI), which also stressed that these strikes have denied more than one million people to access water and electricity for weeks. In parallel with the attacks on civilian objects, the COI said that “several civilians were killed in the Turkish airstrikes, within a pattern of Turkish drone attacks. Such attacks may amount to war crimes.”
The unlawful bombardment by the Turkish Army on areas in north and east Syria in late 2023 and early 2024, has deeply affected the lives of more than five million native people in the region, including Arabs, Kurds, Assyrians, and Syriacs, in addition to approximately one million Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs). This has exacerbated the existing catastrophic humanitarian crisis, with 80% of energy facilities completely damaged. Fuel and electricity production experienced a significant decline, while cooking gas production ceased entirely. The price of imported gas increased fifteenfold, at a time when residents increasingly rely on fuel and gas to cope with electricity shortages. Compounded and specific impact was therefore created on women, girls, and the elderly.
In addition to the deterioration of public services in different sectors, water crisis persists, as politicizing water looms over the issue. Since early 2023, water from Allouk Water Station has been interrupted more than 20 times, and sometimes the interruption has lasted for months, denying more than half a million people, including the IDPs, and the enforced migrants, from their right to access sufficient and safe water for drinking. Moreover, decreasing Syria’s portion of water from the Euphrates River and constructing dams on different rives, from the Turkish side, has impacted the lives of more than five million people, including women.
Despite the generosity shown by some donor countries since the first donor conference for Syria, previous editions witnessed a regrettable and surprising marginalization towards Syria’s northeast. Last year, 107 Syrian organizations sent a letter to the European Union, expressing their disappointment for neglecting local essential issues, and marginalizing regions and communities of northeast Syria during Brussels VII Conference 2023. In the letter, the organizations called on the EU to adopt a more inclusive approach for Syrian issues.
The Syrian organizations signatory to this statement, while urging organizers of the Brussels Eighth Conference to adopt a comprehensive and impartial approach towards humanitarian issues across Syrian, demand to draw attention to the following recommendations. These recommendations have been formulated based on in-depth consultations between local and international organizations operating in northeast Syria, as well as on extensive and focused discussions with local communities to bring together the most pressing humanitarian issues and needs, mitigate migration flows, and promote stability.
The overall outcome of these in-depth discussions yielded the following recommendations:
To Support Humanitarian Response:
Main United Nations stakeholders and agencies, the European Union Member States, international donor countries, and non-governmental international organizations should increase the humanitarian funding to meet the pressing humanitarian needs in northeast Syria, including the provision of food and medical assistance, shelter, and clean water.
Food and water security should be prioritized, and pressure should be placed to ensure that all Syrians have access to potable and usable water while safeguarding water resources from political tensions. Similarly, supporting activities to repair agricultural production facilities and securing basic needs for strategic crops like wheat is essential, as well as ensuring modern irrigation systems for all areas. Additionally, enhancing the support for local civil society organizations to provide direct humanitarian assistance to the locals and IDPs.
To Support Stability-Promotion Mechanisms:
Adequate support should be provided to community and sustainable development projects and programs in northeast Syria. These initiatives would contribute to strengthening stability and improving life conditions for the locals. Examples include building schools and hospitals, providing employment opportunities, and undertaking projects to construct and improve infrastructure in the area. This includes providing necessary support for efforts to repair infrastructure and vital facilities destroyed by the deliberate and announced attacks by Turkey, such as power stations, water and health facilities, and civil infrastructure.
There is also a need to support efforts of enhancing dialogue and political settlement in the region through funding projects that consolidate dialogue and understanding between different parties to achieve peace and lasting stability.
To Enhance the Capacities of Syrian Local Organizations:
In order to achieve the objective of the Brussels Conference in mobilizing vital financial support to alleviate the crisis of basic needs for Syrians, it is crucial to allocate a readily accessible financial block for local organizations, to be used for addressing the most urgent humanitarian needs. Additionally, efforts should be made to enhance the capacities of Syrian local organizations, facilitate their access to resources and grants to ensure effective and impactful provision to local communities in northern and eastern Syria, and better meeting the resident’ needs. Supporting programs aimed at fostering coordination and partnerships between local and international non-governmental organizations is also essential.
Furthermore, it is important to support the development of local administration in the region, enhance its capacity to provide essential services and manage local affairs effectively. Likewise, supporting programs aimed at improving governance, enhancing transparency, and developing effective and meaningful mechanisms for reporting, complaints, and ensuring effective redress for victims.
Justice in Supporting IDPs Camps and Seeking Solutions:
Tens of thousands of IDPs in camps in northeast Syria are not receiving sustained or adequate aid, thereby negatively impacting their basic rights. The assistance provided by UN agencies to the camps is inconsistent, leaving some camps, especially the “informal”-unrecognized ones, without sufficient or sustained aid. Therefore, UN agencies should conduct an assessment to ensure that the minimum global standards for humanitarian response in such sites are being met and widen the scale of services provision to encompass the residents.
International donors should increase funding to respond to the protracted nature of displacement in northeast Syria and provide weather-appropriate shelters, sufficient sanitation, and adequate access to food, clean drinking water, health care, and education.
To Support Victims and Survivors Initiatives and Advocate for Their Causes:
International donors should direct their efforts towards providing comprehensive and integrated support to victims and survivors. This includes providing necessary funding for initiatives aimed at supporting the victims and enhancing their rights. Additionally, it is crucial to provide necessary support for their psychological recovery and social integration and support efforts aimed at promoting accountability and justice is necessary.
Likewise, it is essential to provide necessary support for programs aiming at empowering victims and survivors to represent themselves and advocate for their rights. Supporting programs for effective representation and participation of victims and survivors in decision-making processes and accountability mechanisms is crucial to ensure that their voices are heard, and their needs and demands are met.
To Promote an Inclusive Peace Process for All Syrians:
The United Nations and the European Union must work towards advancing a political solution that includes all components of the Syrian society. Any sustainable and effective peace project in Syria cannot be accomplished without being inclusive of all segments of the Syrian population.
For this purpose, the UN should ensure the existence of all political actors, as well as the independent Syrian civil society in political negotiations. Moreover, it should broaden the diversity in selecting members of the current Syrian Constitutional Committee, and particularly provide seats for agents representing communities in northeast Syria that is currently underrepresented. The constitution cannot be expected to be a fruitful step towards a comprehensive peace process unless all components of the Syrian population are involved in its drafting.
To Handle Sanctions Carefully and Ensure Their Periodic Review:
The struggle to combat impunity and achieve accountability is among the top priorities of transitional justice. In light of this, the United Nations, the European Union, and the countries participating in the Conference should support accountability initiatives led by the Syrian civil society and the international community to hold all perpetrators accountable and subject them to sanctions.
While ensuring that the sanctions imposed on Syria do not become a tool exacerbating the economic situation of Syrians, and to avoid inflicting harm on Syrian communities, it is imperative to establish an independent mechanism overseen by the United Nations to conduct impartial assessments of the effectiveness of the sanctions and study their impact on civilian populations regularly.

Posts on the CSO-NES platforms:

Snapshots from the Health Forum in NES held in the Qamishli, under the title “The Reality of the Health Sector in Northern and Eastern Syria.”

https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=pfbid09FoLyey8QaPG3DWL5f3DHkPvgU1FyePrk1q9nKVXH7BYA4EjhYnqA1vW77AaDEUql&id=100075781364334

Snapshot from the Education Forum in Northern and Eastern Syria held in Qamishli, under the title “The Reality of the Education Sector in Northern and Eastern Syria.”
https://twitter.com/NesCso/status/1785762329151344863/photo/1

News of organizations affiliated with the CSO-NES:

Under the title “My Proof is My Right,” local humanitarian organizations in the city of Manbij, in collaboration with the Organizations Office and the Social Affairs and Labor Committee in Manbij, have started their rounds in the offices of the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria (AANES) and its affiliated committees and institutions in Manbij. Their aim is to distribute brochures specifically designed for the returnees from the Al-Hol camp.
The general objective of the campaign:
The general campaign’s objective is to activate Article 70 in the Social Contract of Northern and Eastern Syria, which aims to protect private property and ensure that it is not confiscated without fair compensation, thereby contributing to effective social integration. We are working diligently to activate Article 70 in the Social Contract of Northern and Eastern Syria to protect individuals’ rights to private property in the region.
The people targeted in the group:
The campaign targeted the returnees from the Al-Hol camp whose properties were confiscated within the camp.
Children participated in an activity organized by Sahem Organization, showcasing their remarkable creativity through a puppet show as part of the “Connected Communities” initiative. A total of 1,500 children took part in the activity.

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