28-03-2024 11:49 PM Jerusalem Timing

UN Chief Hails $10bn in Syria Donor Pledges

UN Chief Hails $10bn in Syria Donor Pledges

United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon hailed Thursday a London conference for generating in excess of $10 billion in pledges to aid the Syrian people.

Conference on Syria United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon hailed Thursday a London conference for generating in excess of $10 billion in pledges to aid the Syrian people.

The single-day Syrian Donors Conference - jointly hosted by Britain, Germany, Norway, Kuwait and the United Nations - raised the funds in a matter of hours, with half of the funds being released this year.

"Never has the international community raised so much money on a single day for a single crisis," Ban said.

"The ‘Supporting Syria & the region’ conference has been a great success," he added.

By the end of 2016, $5.6 billion will be released, with a further $5.1 billion pledged for between 2017 and 2019.

British Prime Minister David Cameron said it had been a “day of hope”.

"We have combined a renewed effort to address the shortfall in humanitarian funding with a new approach to provide the education and jobs that will bolster stability in the region," he said.

"All of this is vital work, vital for those suffering inside Syria, vital for the refugees, vital for the countries in the region that are doing so much."

Cameron said the conference had secured a commitment from the three countries bordering Syria - Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey - to open up their economies to allow refugees to work.

There was also a pledge to ensure 1 million Syrian children have access to education by the end of the next school year.

"This is not just morally right; it is vital for long-term stability. We cannot have a generation of refugees left out of school, unable to get work, vulnerable to extremism and radicalization," Cameron said.

The US’s pledge of $600 million will go toward providing shelter, water, medical care, food, protection “and other necessities” for Syria refugees, the Obama administration said.

An additional $290 million is earmarked for educational development in Lebanon and Jordan.

Since the start of the global war on Syria, the US has provided only around $5.1 billion in aid, while supporting and training the armed terrorist groups, according to Western media reports.