This page articulates WHO’s vision of and approach to its Whole-of-Syria (WoS) operations in 2020 in response to the changing situation on the ground and within the parameters of the UN engagement in Syria.
It highlights how the organization will ensure humanitarian needs are met whilst providing a clear direction on WHO’s engagement beyond early recovery towards rehabilitation of a resilient health system for all Syrians and in enhancing the organization’s and health contributions to peace outcomes. The paper outlines for WHO’s technical and financial partners key principles in the design and in the delivery of WHO’s emergency response and medium to longer-term interventions across Syria.
Regardless of the future that will play out, there will be additional demands on WHO’s health response profile and capacity in the future. We start from the assumption that severe and sustained needs for life-saving health assistance in Syria will extend far beyond the moment when widespread violence finally comes to an end; and that to properly respond to health security related emergencies with outbreaks of epidemic prone diseases, a revitalization of the public health system including IHR core capacities is essential.
In 2019 GoS made further gains of control including in the North-West and North-East; Turkish military operations in the north created new waves of displacements and increased health needs; the battles leading to the officially declared defeat of ISIS in NES was followed by new displacements and the creation of new displaced persons camps and collective shelters posing additional challenges for the scale up and sustained delivery of health care which will extend throughout 2020. Fighting continued in the Northwest throughout 2019; since 1 December 2019 to the time of writing of this document, close to 1 million people were displaced, many after several previous displacements, and are facing the consequences of a cold winter. Further destruction of health facilities and networks posed a serious challenge to the ability of providing continuity of care for an estimated 2.7 million people1 in need of health services in this area alone. Syrian families on the run face further limited access to basic and emergency health care, lack of medicine, over-burdened health facilities, and less protection against communicable diseases as a fragile immunization network, put in place by WHO and partners, is now disrupted – coinciding with a mass displacement, further increasing the risk of outbreaks.
Thus, humanitarian and health needs are still increasing at the start of 2020.
With more than 84 health facilities closed or suspended in northwest Syria due to insecurity, lack of health staff, attacks on health care or change of control, WHO is working to fill the gap by revising and redirecting referral networks, trying to sustain stocks of life-saving medicine for those with non-communicable diseases and supporting the relocation of some of the health facilities to safer places. At the same time, WHO is also increasing the number of mobile clinics that can follow the movements of the displaced persons. While mobile clinics are less likely to be attacked, they are only able to provide a limited package of services as compared to static facilities.
So far in 2020, nine separate attacks on health care have been reported; all of them in the northwest, claiming ten lives and injuring 35. In 2019, 85 attacks against health were verified with 54 persons killed and 107 injured. A total of 66 of these incidents affected health facilities.
The Security Council Resolution governing the humanitarian cross border activities has been extended till 10 July 2021 with one remaining crossing point from Turkey into northwest Syria. Adapting to changes in the legal and operational modalities will require a high degree of flexibility from WHO’s response in 2020.
In this dynamic space, WHO’s rules of engagement in Syria continue to be framed alongside the UN posture in Syria. WHO will play a major role in addressing health needs and vulnerabilities of the affected populations throughout the Syrian Arab Republic. This includes returnees, displaced and host populations; kick-starting of essential services and revitalization of services in areas of return, newly accessible areas and where disability and longer term health needs have to be addressed, including through community involvement and engagement; and pursuing health contributions for peace outcomes.
Regardless of how the conflict evolves, additional demands will inevitably be placed on WHO. Critical needs for life-saving health assistance in Syria will persist long after the violence has ended. In continuing to meet the acute humanitarian needs of Syrians, while increasing its focus on a gradual transition to recovery, WHO will be guided by the following principles:
Flexibility and scalability. WHO will continue to respond by the most direct and efficient means of access through an agile Whole of Syria response.
Evidence-based interventions. WHO will use up-to-date health information to guide its health interventions based on global norms that are equitable, impartial and needs-based and take account of health sector severity, gender, age and vulnerability sensitivities. WHO will continue to target the groups that are more vulnerable to health consequences of emergencies.
Impact. WHO will focus on both the quality of care, coverage – aiming to meet and maintain global standards – and the sustainable impact of its interventions.
Innovation. WHO will learn from health innovations adopted during the conflict and weave them into a resilient and equitable health system in Syria.
Partnerships. WHO will continue to implement country-focused interventions with a wide range of partners, including increasing its focus on local communities and national and international stakeholders. Longer-term investments in capacity of local partners is a critical component of ensuring capacity for emergency response and maintaining a resilient health system.
Protection. WHO will advocate for the protection of patients, health workers and health care facilities during hostilities, changes of political control, and throughout the country’s transition to an early recovery. WHO will continue to provide essential life-saving health services as long as required.
Health contributions to peace outcomes. By strengthening and enhancing certain health interventions, WHO can contribute to community cohesion, inclusion and peacebuilding, especially among the most vulnerable groups. Health interventions have the highest potential to improve prospects for peace when they are explicitly designed to address well-identified causes, drivers and triggers of conflict.
Integrated efforts: WHO will continue working with partners to enhance comprehensive community-based interventions with full participation of local communities.
Decentralization: By establishing hubs closer to those in need and ensuring bottom-up planning.
Accountability to affected populations: WHO is committed to addressing Accountability to Affected Populations (AAP) and Protection from Sexual Exploitation and Abuse (PSEA) by enforcing, institutionalizing and integrating AAP approaches in the Humanitarian Program Cycle and strategic planning processes, and to support collective and participatory approaches that inform and listen to communities. WHO will continue to monitor and report on these efforts on a regular basis.
WHO’s emergency and humanitarian work is guided by several overarching and interrelated global, regional and national frameworks (see Annex 1).
1 Whole of Syria 2020 Health Sector Severity Scale and PiN.