uN humanitarian chief
Valerie Amos has urged the Security Council to act immediately to ensure
more humanitarian access in war-torn Syria.
Calling for a resolution, she said it was "unacceptable" that
both Damascus and rebels continued to "flagrantly" violate humanitarian
law.
The council has been deadlocked over aid deliveries in Syria, where millions have been forced to flee their homes.
Meanwhile, Syrian troops resumed their attack on a key rebel town.
Warplanes have been carrying out air strikes
and artillery has been pounding Yabroud since Wednesday. The town is the
last rebel stronghold in the Qalamoun mountains, near the Lebanese
border.
There has been a surge in fighting across Syria in recent
weeks, with both sides apparently trying to gain territory to strengthen
their hands in ongoing peace talks in Geneva, Switzerland.
The negotiations between the government of President Bashar
al-Assad and Syrian opposition groups remain deadlocked, with both sides
failing to even agree a common agenda on Wednesday.
The UN-Arab League envoy to Syria, Lakhdar Brahimi, met US
and Russian officials who, he said, assured him they would try to
"unblock the situation".
But he warned: "Failure is always staring at us in the face."
'Wrong model'
Briefing the UN Security Council on Thursday, Baroness Amos
said: "It is unacceptable that four months since the members of that
Council demanded action, international humanitarian law continues to be
consistently and flagrantly violated by all parties to the conflict.
"All parties are failing in their responsibility to protect
civilians. We understand that a war is going on, but even wars have
rules."
Speaking to the BBC's Nick Bryant, Baroness Amos said a
UN-brokered ceasefire deal which has allowed civilians to be evacuated
from the besieged Old City of Homs in the past few days did not offer a
long-term solution.
"It's 14 months since I raised the alarm in the Security
Council about Homs. We managed to get 1,200 people out of Homs, we
managed to get food and medicines in for 2,500 people," she said.
"If it's going to take 14 months to do that when you've got
250,000 people in besieged communities, when you've got over three
million people in hard-to-reach communities, I really find it very
difficult to say that this is a [right] model."
The Security Council remains deadlocked over the issue.
The US, Britain and France favour a toughly-worded
resolution, but it is opposed by Russia which has put forward an
alternative draft on fighting what it calls "terrorism" in Syria and
offering its own plan for improving aid, our correspondent adds.
The civil conflict in Syria has claimed more than 100,000
lives since March 2011. Some 9.5 million people have been forced to flee
their homes.
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