UN slashes cash aid for Syrian refugees in Jordan

World Food Programme blames 'unprecedented funding crisis' for cuts

A child at the Zaatari camp for Syrian refugees in Jordan. EPA
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The UN food agency will reduce monthly cash aid for 120,000 Syrian refugees living in two camps in Jordan because of what it described as an “unprecedented funding crisis”.

From August, the monthly cash allowance for camp residents will be reduced to $21, from $32, the World Food Programme said on Tuesday.

Jordan is a country of 11 million people and hosts about 1.3 million refugees from Syria.

Most of them live in towns and cities across the kingdom while several tens of thousands have settled in two camps, Zaatari and Azraq.

Jordanian officials have warned that the kingdom cannot fill the gap left by international donors.

The agency said last week it would gradually cut off 50,000 refugees in Jordan from its assistance altogether. The WFP had initially covered 465,000 refugees.

For years, UN agencies and international humanitarian organisations have struggled to reach budgetary requirements for their assistance in Syria and for Syrian refugees in neighbouring countries.

This has been due to donor fatigue, the economic impact of the coronavirus pandemic and Ukraine’s war with Russia.

Although Syrian President Bashar Al Assad’s government was able to reclaim large pieces of territory with the help of its allies, Russia and Iran, the crisis in the war-torn country remains in a stalemate.

“As funding dries up, our hands are tied,” Alberto Correia Mendes, the WFP representative for Jordan said.

The agency said that even with the current cuts, it still faces a funding shortfall of about $41 million and may have to impose additional measures.

Funding cuts have also affected millions of Syrian refugees in Lebanon and Turkey, where anti-refugee rhetoric and calls for mass deportations have surged in light of economic and political turmoil.

Syria's uprising-turned-civil war, now in its 13th year, has killed about half a million people and displaced half of its prewar population of 23 million.

Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi spoke about the kingdom's inability to fill in funding gaps at this year's annual donor conference on Syria in Brussels last June. Last week, he warned again that “refugees will suffer”.

“This is not on Jordan. It is on those who are cutting support,” he said. “Providing dignified lives to refugees is a global responsibility. It is not ours alone as host country.”

Dominik Bartsch, the UN refugee agency's representative to Jordan, said the aid rollback has forced agencies to look only to the most vulnerable families, leaving many in need without assistance.

“There is an imminent risk that the situation is sliding back into a humanitarian crisis with serious consequences for refugees and host communities,” Mr Bartsch said.

In a visit to Damascus on July 4 where he met Mr Al Assad, Mr Safadi called for investment into Syria's battered infrastructure to speed up voluntary refugee returns.

Jordan has also spearheaded regional talks with Damascus to reach a solution to end the conflict.

The sanctions of western nations on Syria still stand, including for alleged war crimes and involvement in the drug trade.

They have not endorsed the restoration of ties with Mr Al Assad or funding reconstruction, as Arab countries have.

Updated: July 19, 2023, 4:27 AM