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EU pledges 1.5 billion euros of humanitarian aid to help Syrians
Josep Borrell-EU's top diplomat/Facebook

Josep Borrell, High Representative of the EU for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, said on Tuesday (May 10), the European Union (EU) pledged to provide a total of 1.5 billion euros (1.58 billion U.S. dollars) of humanitarian assistance to Syria in 2022, and an equal amount next year, the Xinhua reported.

He said the 27-nation bloc would provide an additional one billion euros for Syria this year, bringing the annual total to 1.5 billion euros and would provide 1.56 billion euros next year.

The sixth European Union's Conference on Supporting the Future of Syria and the Region kicked off in Brussels on Tuesday. Borrell said the 11-year "bloody and destructive conflict" caused "unspeakable suffering" to millions of people and warned that the Russia-Ukraine conflict was making the plight of poverty-stricken Syrians far worse.

Al-Hol camp/Association of syria refugees Facebook page

Borrell said that 60 percent of the Syrian population "suffer from food insecurity and barely know where the next meal is going to come from."

European Union holds Brussels Conference 6 to support future of Syria

He noted that the conflict in Ukraine will increase food and energy prices and the situation in Syria will become worse.

The German Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) announced on Tuesday, Germany pledged to pay 1.05 billion euros in aid for Syria over the coming years.

German Minister for Development Svenja Schulze at the conference said: "Even though Europe is obviously looking at Ukraine right now, we are not forgetting the Syrian civil war and the suffering it is causing."

UNICEF warns more than 12 million Syrian children need aid

In addition to monetary aid, Schulze called for "a global effort" to cushion the impact of the Russia-Ukraine conflict on world food supplies.

Source: xinhua