Vatican
City, 6 June 2013
(VIS) – The Pontifical Council “Cor Unum” called a meeting,
from 4-5 June, of the Catholic charitable agencies that are working
to combat the crisis in Syria. Around 25 representatives of local
churches, charitable agencies working in the region, institutional
donors from the Catholic world, the Holy See, and the Apostolic
Nunciature in Syria gathered to reaffirm the continuity of their
commitment and to renew the Holy Father's appeal that all violence
cease and that paths of dialogue and reconciliation, based on respect
for all, be opened.
The
local Churches have responded concretely to the population, both in
Syria and the entire region, from the beginning of the conflict. More
than 400,000 persons are regularly supported, without discrimination,
by humanitarian aid to the cost of more than 25 million Euro.
Testimonials confirm the extent of the tragedy: almost 7 million
people who need humanitarian assistance, more than 4.5 million
forcibly displaced persons, and an ever-increasing number of persons
seeking security outside of the country's borders.
A
more careful analysis of the needs in this area have revealed that,
with the onset of summer, the risk of epidemics in the affected
population—with pregnant women, children, the elderly, and the
disabled in particular jeopardy—will certainly increase along with
shortages of medicines and aid.
In
the face of this alarming situation, the Pontifical Council “Cor
Unum” has launched an appeal on behalf of all the agencies involved
to economically support the humanitarian efforts and the search for
peace, in the hopes of rebuilding a country that has been torn and
destroyed by the conflict.
The
international community must also provide more support to the
countries that are receiving refugees and to humanitarian operations
there, in order to be able to respond to their growing needs. The
international community's mediation efforts, even if more decisive in
respect to previous months, still seem insufficient. Thus the risks
are increasing that the conflict in Syria might become another
endless war in which the first victims are defenceless civilians, who
are often treated as targets in the “useless massacre” of this
ongoing violence.
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