United Nations' humanitarian chief Valerie Amos (R) meets with newly appointed Syrian Prime Minister Syrian Wael al-Halqi in Damascus, on August 14, 2012. Amos also arrived in Damascus on a regional visit "to draw attention to the deteriorating humanitarian situation" and discuss ways of scaling-up relief efforts, her office said. - AFP photo

 

DAMASCUS: UN humanitarian chief Valerie Amos held talks in Syria on Tuesday on ways to step up relief efforts as the country faces an increasingly precarious humanitarian situation.

She met government officials in Damascus and is due to meet aid groups including the local Red Crescent as well as families affected by the conflict on a trip that will also take her to neighbouring Lebanon, a UN spokesman said.

Among those she met were Syria's new Prime Minister Wael al-Halqi, who replaced Riad Hijab following his defection last week.

The visit “aims to draw attention to the deteriorating humanitarian situation in Syria and the impact of the conflict on people either remaining in Syria and who have fled to other countries, including Lebanon,” the UN office for the coordination of humanitarian affairs (OCHA) said ahead of her arrival.

While in Syria, Amos was expected to discuss ways of urgently scaling-up relief efforts and reducing the suffering of civilians caught up in the fighting.

Two million people are now estimated to have been affected by the Syria conflict and more than one million are internally displaced as fighting continues in Damascus, Aleppo and other cities, OCHA said.

The UN Refugee Agency said Tuesday that almost 157,600 Syrians had also fled the violence and crossed into Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey and Iraq, although many more have left but not registered officially.

At least 23,000 people have been killed across Syria since the anti-regime revolt broke out in March 2011, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

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