Home » Projects » EMERGENCY » Syria: “The sanctions have no result other than making people suffer and become poor and miserable”

Syria: “The sanctions have no result other than making people suffer and become poor and miserable”

Church representatives criticise ongoing embargo politics of the West
Just ten years after the Syrian War began, the project partners of the international pontifical foundation Aid to the Church in Need (ACN) sharply condemn the ongoing sanctions of the West. They have fallen far short of their actual objective of weakening the Assad regime, the Greek Catholic Archbishop of Aleppo, Jean-Clément Jeanbart, explained to ACN: “They will have no effect on the government and their policies, because the government is away from the effects of the sanctions.”

However, all the more devastating are the effects of the trade and foreign exchange restrictions on the civilian population. “People no longer have enough food, fuel, gas to heat their homes, and electricity,” Archbishop Jeanbart said. He further explained that the people are no longer able to take out loans to finance larger purchases. “The sanctions have no result other than making people suffer and become poor and miserable.”

Syria: “The sanctions have no result other than making people suffer and become poor and miserable”.
Syria: “The sanctions have no result other than making people suffer and become poor and miserable”.

“The people are on the verge of starving to death”

In an interview with ACN, Sister Maria Lucia Ferreira described the actual implications of the West’s sanction policies. The religious sister is a member of the Order of the Unity of Antioch and lives in the monastery of Mar Yakub in Qara, close to the Lebanese border. “The situation is growing ever more dire; the people are on the verge of starving to death. Some have already died,” Sister Lucia explained.

According to the religious, the precarious situation was created not only by the conflict that has been raging for ten years, but also by the sanctioning policies and the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. “The prices are just going up and up. It is difficult to survive.” She believes that the most pressing problem at the moment is the scarcity of raw materials, which has made it impossible for many to heat their flats. “The people are queuing to buy petrol or heating oil, but often leave empty-handed. Fuel is very scarce because there is little wood in this region,” Sister Lucia explained. She also talked about the severe shortages in electricity supply that have yet to be resolved. “There are times when we are without power for 12 hours – and when it works, then often only for half an hour.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o3jaTva_dgk

A call for negotiations instead of sanctions

Instead of placing economic pressure on the Syrian government, Archbishop Jeanbart calls on the Western states to enter into negotiations with President Assad. “There needs to be a fair dialogue. The West can bring pressure that these will be given if the government agrees to find a way to peace and to change some of its behaviour.”

Don't miss the latest updates!

Priest warns of ‘guerrilla warfare’ as dozens killed by suicide bombers

A PRIEST has warned that terrorists are “sneaking” into villages…

“The Church is really a rock in Lebanon” as airstrikes intensify

Churches have opened their doors to receive IDPs, but efforts…

Pakistan: Demand for justice after Christian man found hanged

The Christian community has refused the official account that Mr…

“We will stay, despite the war”, says priest in southern Lebanon

Since the escalation of the conflict in the Middle East,…

Drone strike in Erbil raises fears among Iraq’s Christians

The return of war to the Middle East has reopened…

ACN’s global petition for religious freedom surpasses 20,000 signatures

Billions of people live in countries where religious freedom is…

Algeria: The “Son of St Augustine” visits Annaba

The Vatican has officially confirmed that in the coming April,…

Mauritania: The challenges of ministering to a community of migrants

The only diocese in Mauritania has just celebrated its sixtieth…

Priest warns of ‘guerrilla warfare’ as dozens killed by suicide bombers

A PRIEST has warned that terrorists are “sneaking” into villages after a suspected suicide attack in north-east Nigeria resulted in multiple deaths. Father Joseph Fidelis, from Maiduguri Diocese, told Catholic...

“The Church is really a rock in Lebanon” as airstrikes intensify

Churches have opened their doors to receive IDPs, but efforts are overstretched operating schools, hospitals, care homes and orphanages. AS another 25 people were killed by airstrikes in Beirut on...

Another war in the Holy Land. “We have never faced anything like this,” say Christians

With yet another blow to regional stability, many Christians in the Holy Land believe it is time to leave. Yet the mission of the Church remains, bringing hope and dignity...