Four major UK Churches have called on governments to provide substantial new funding for Syrian refugees.
The call from the Baptist Union of Great Britain, the Church of
Scotland, the Methodist Church and the United Reformed Church comes on
the eve of the 2016 international pledging conference for Syria, taking place in London.
The UK, Germany, Kuwait, Norway, and the United Nations will co-host
the conference tomorrow aimed at raising significant new funding to meet
the immediate and longer-term needs of those affected.
In 2015, following the last international appeal by the UN, only 43 per cent of the required funds were raised.
The UN has stated that a further $7.7 billion will be required in aid
to help the vulnerable people in Syria and support Jordan, Lebanon and
Turkey, who host the vast majority of Syria's 4.6 million refugees.
Among those expressing concern about the situation is King Abdullah
of Jordan,
who said yesterday his country was at "boiling point" because
of an influx of hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees.
The king told the BBC there was enormous pressure on Jordan's social services, infrastructure and economy.
"Sooner or later, I think, the dam is going to burst," he warned.
During the last few decades Jordan has welcomed Palestinians, Iraqis,
and now so many Syrians that they make up nearly 20 per cent of the
population.
King Abdullah said: "For the first time, we can't do it any more."
Warning that churches have been targeted even while full of
worshipers on a Sunday, Dr Mary Mikhael, spokesperson for the National
Evangelical Synod of Syria and Lebanon, said: "As the Syrian tragedy
continues to unfold, the Christian community is deeply concerned about
its future. Churches and ancient cathedrals in Damascus, Homs, Aleppo,
and other places are being purposely targeted by armed groups, and many
have been destroyed.
"Will Syria, once considered the cradle of Christianity, become empty
of the nation's Christian community? This is our deep fear. Over 1.2
million Syrians have fled into nearby Lebanon and continue to endure
unimaginable hardship. The Christian communities of Syria and Lebanon
appeal for peace, justice and relief for the millions displaced and
refugees."
John Ellis, moderator of the General Assembly of the United Reformed
Church, said: "We welcome the UK's commitment to aid for Syria, and our
Government's initiative in hosting this international pledging
conference in London. We want every refugee child in Jordan, Lebanon and
Turkey to have the opportunity to attend school – but this aim, as
outlined by the United Nations, needs funding."
Frances Guy, Christian Aid's head of Middle East region and the UK's
former ambassador to Lebanon, said: "Let's remember the Syrians at the
heart of this conference: the Syrians trapped inside besieged areas in
Syria, and the Syrians who have managed to flee to places of relative
safety inside Syria and in neighbouring countries.
"They all need basic humanitarian assistance and some stability in
their lives. This means stopping the bombing, guaranteeing that aid can
reach all those in need wherever they are and allowing those who have
fled their homeland opportunities to contribute to the societies that
are so generously hosting them, as well as provide for their own
families in dignity."
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