ACN President Heine-Geldern sees an urgent need for action, particularly in the area of money transfers for emergency aid.
Ten years after the conflict in Syria began, the international Catholic pastoral charity ACN International has called on the United States and the European Union to facilitate the delivery of humanitarian aid to the sanctioned country. “It is our duty to provide help to the suffering civil population of Syria – and especially to the rapidly dwindling Christian minority. In their name I beg you to implement the existing international legal framework, which allows humanitarian exceptions to the embargo,” Thomas Heine-Geldern, ACN President, declared.
The legal exemptions included within the sanctions regime currently imposed upon Syria cannot be utilised fully, Heine-Geldern explained. In particular, obstacles hindering money transfers and the import of humanitarian goods render any form of assistance impossible. “Although the sanctions foresee exceptions for money transfers related to humanitarian help, it does not work.”
According to Heine-Geldern, the European IBAN and American SWIFT banking codes block transfers bearing any reference to Syria and any city within the country. “Consequently, it becomes almost impossible for charitable organisations to transfer funds for humanitarian purposes to meet the needs of the suffering population.”
For Heine-Geldern, money transfers are of vital importance because church institutions and NGOs do not have themselves the capacity to ship the goods needed for the survival of almost 14 million Syrians in need of humanitarian assistance. “So we normally send money for our counterparts to buy the food, medical help and clothing locally,” Heine-Geldern said.
For this reason, the president of ACN calls on the community of states to instruct banks to accept money transfers for humanitarian aid, as already provided for in the exceptions to the existing sanctions.
Besides the obstacles preventing the transfer of money, Heine-Geldern discussed the problems inherent in importing humanitarian goods into Syria. “To apply for permits, our partners often have to overcome insurmountable multilingual procedures put in place by the sanction authorities.” Permits are necessary even for small amounts of goods and involve high fees, Heine-Geldern explained.
It is particularly difficult to import goods that can be used for purposes other than humanitarian ones (dual-use goods), Heine-Geldern said. As the interpretation of these provisions is very broad, the president continued, even the powdered milk urgently needed for undernourished babies and children falls into this category.
Therefore, Heine-Geldern calls on the community of states to implement procedures that clearly define what is permitted and what is prohibited and then make it possible to carry out all measures that have been allowed. He suggested that “an interim solution could be providing a general license for designated NGOs.”
Thanks to its benefactors, ACN has been able to support the suffering civil population of Syria, among them especially the Christians of various denominations. Since the outbreak of the conflict in mid-March 2011, they have been living in catastrophic conditions. Due to forced migration, the Christian presence in Syria is threatened with extinction. Despite the mentioned difficulties, almost 42 million euros have been donated to support more than 900 humanitarian and pastoral projects of the local Church since the beginning of the war.