The Washington Post published a report saying that humanitarian aid organizations that are supposed to provide various aid to thousands of victims displaced from Idlib are finding it difficult to support even their staff members who are subject to death and repeated displacement, food and drug shortages and blankets in the bitter cold.

The report added that humanitarian aid workers have become homeless and are searching for coverings for themselves in the harsh winter these days and facing the military progress of the ruthless Syrian regime against the last enclave of the Syrian armed opposition after nine years of war.

The newspaper quoted the executive director of "Ihsan Relief and Development" Bara Al-Samoudi as saying that about a third of the organization's staff and volunteers, who totaled about a thousand, have been displaced by the fighting over the past few months, but they have not found a place to house them as desperate civilians filled homes, apartments, mosques and sports halls Even under the trees in the area, the organization's staff had to use the organization's few offices to sleep and live.

Relief work is under threat
The report pointed to the killing of paramedics after their assistance to survivors of the rubble, and the injuries of doctors and nurses during their movement as a result of the bombing or air strikes.

"The United Nations is totally dependent on more than ten thousand aid workers in Idlib, and many of them have been displaced, which will undermine the overall United Nations response to the humanitarian crisis in Idlib," said the UN spokesman for the coordination of humanitarian affairs in Gaziantep, David Swanson. continuously.

Injured by a government raid last December in the Saraqib area in Idlib, to be moved away from the site (Anatolia)

A statement issued this week by the United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs, Mark Lowcock, described the crisis in Idlib as having reached a new and horrific level.

The report stated that aid workers lack many of the work and transportation essentials associated with large-scale relief efforts such as traveling in convoys of armored vehicles or chartered planes to transport them from the crisis zone or away from violence.

Homeless workers
The fiancée of Sayyid Issa, general manager of the "Violet Organization", said that three of her paramedics were killed last June with a patient during a previous government attack when an air strike hit an ambulance in the town of Ma`rat al-Numan.

In the current crisis, employees of "Violet" and its volunteers, including a man who was responsible for providing housing for about seven thousand displaced families, were displaced, and a fiancé said that he knew every empty house, but now he resides in a tent.

Almost six aid organizations said dozens of their volunteers were made homeless. Misty Basswell, director of Middle East policy for the International Rescue Committee, International Rescue Community said that at least 15% of Syrian staff working in the group have become displaced due to insecurity, and the front lines are close to relief efforts, and the group and its partners have been forced to suspend activities in some facilities Relief and ambulance convoys.

"It is not easy to find them," said Mazen Kiwara, a doctor at the American Syrian Society. "Two thousand doctors and medical workers have been displaced. It is the worst situation I faced in eight years."