Northern Syria: Acute water crisis poses serious health risks
Displaced women carrying a pail of clean water provided by Doctors Without Borders in a camp in northwest Syria. Syria, 2021. © Abdurzaq Alshami
People are facing a desperate situation in northern Syria, as limited access to clean water over the past few months has reached breaking point. A decade of war has left water and sanitation infrastructure destroyed and neglected, and today over three million people, mostly displaced by the conflict, are suffering dire consequences.
“Even when water is available and accessible to people in northern Syria, it is sometimes unsafe and contaminated,” says Ibrahim Mughlaj, Doctors Without Borders health promotion officer in northwest Syria. “We are regularly confronted with the health impact of poor water quality, which often brings waterborne diseases and other health issues into the camps, such as diarrhoea, hepatitis, impetigo, scabies, and many others,” he says.
“While the northwest is currently witnessing an alarming increase in COVID-19 cases, the limited access to water also seriously hampers the hygiene measures essential for the prevention and treatment of the virus,” says Mughlaj.
Across northern Syria, humanitarian actors are trying to fill the gaps and respond to the many needs, but the overall accessibility to water and sanitation facilities remains an issue, mainly because of the decrease in funding for such activities. Water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) operations currently represent only four per cent of the entire humanitarian response budget for the whole of Syria, which is less than one-third of what was spent last year for the same activities.
Displaced people are filling their barrels with clean water provided by Doctors Without Borders in a camp in northwest Syria. Syria, 2021. © Abdurzaq Alshami
The impact of decreased funding
In northwest Syria, this decrease in funding has led many organisations to stop water trucking activities in several camps. Areas like Deir Hassan, for instance, have been strongly impacted by this reduction of services. Since May 2021, the number of waterborne diseases cases increased tremendously in the area. “Just between the month of May and June 2021, which is the period when some of these activities were stopped, waterborne diseases increased by 47 per cent,” says Teresa Graceffa, Doctors Without Borders medical coordinator for Syria.
In July 2021, our teams noticed rising diarrhoea cases in more than 30 camps in Idlib governorate and also detected frequent scabies cases and other waterborne diseases throughout their consultations in displacement camps.
Since the beginning of the year, 28 per cent of the total consultations in an Doctors Without Borders-supported hospital in Idlib governorate were reported as acute watery diarrhoea cases. As a result, we launched a temporary emergency response and installed an Oral Rehydration Point (ORP) in the hospital, to provide care for patients with mild to moderate dehydration and to inform, sensitise and educate people on how to prevent the spread of diarrhoea.
But this is not a one-off problem, it is a recurring challenge that our teams face due to a structural issue that only worsens with time as funding for such activities decreases.Dr Mohammed El-Mutwakil, field coord.
In northeast Syria, people have also been significantly affected by waterborne diseases, as well as increased food insecurity and are at higher risk of malnutrition, due to the poorer quality of water and reduced availability. An Doctors Without Borders-supported primary healthcare centre in Raqqa reported that the number of diarrhoea cases in May 2021 was 50 per cent higher than in May 2020.
In Hassakeh, one million people have faced reduced access to water for nearly two years, due to repetitive and sustained disruptions of water provision from the Alouk water station, which is under the control of the Turkish authorities. Additionally, people in northeast Syria are impacted by the severe reduction in volume of water flowing in the Euphrates river, which is the most significant source of water for northeast Syria.
Filling the gap
The insufficient number of water and sanitation facilities often leads people to resort to unsafe coping mechanisms. “Sometimes we buy water ourselves,” says Hussain Muhammad, a man who currently lives in a displacement camp in Idlib governorate. “But when we can't, we have to wait for support from humanitarian organisations. And if it doesn’t come, during the winter we put pots under the rain to collect water,” he says.
“Since the roofs and tents are dirty, the water gets polluted and it becomes unsafe to drink or shower. It is limestone water and contains sand. When we used this water, my one-year old son developed a kidney disease. I was told to buy him bottled water, but I couldn't afford it.”
In response to this acute water and sanitation crisis, our teams have developed a comprehensive water, sanitation and hygiene response, adopting a gap-filling approach to cover the needs of people in northern Syria over the 10 years of conflict.
A Doctors Without Borders staff member checks a latrine built by Doctors Without Borders teams in a camp in northwest Syria. Syria, 2021. © Abdurzaq Alshami
In the spring of 2021, as gaps in funding became more evident, we decided to temporarily scale up our water and sanitation activities. “We doubled the number of camps we covered in Idlib governorate,” says Ousama Joukhadar, Doctors Without Borders logistics manager for Syria.
We are now running water and sanitation services in about 90 camps in northwest Syria, reaching around 30,000 displaced people. The activities carried out by our teams include hygiene kits distribution, water trucking and treatment, waste collection, water and sewage networks, latrines construction and rehabilitation, as well as community-based health promotion initiatives.
In northeast Syria, we have also responded with additional safe water trucking in Hassakeh city and an increased malnutrition response in Raqqa.
But all these initiatives are not permanent fixes. There are still many people who suffer from the consequences of a lack of access to clean water and we find ourselves in a situation where we are unable to cover all the needs.Benjamin Mutiso, field coordinator
“Funding gaps continue to widen, the distribution of water is sometimes politicised, while MSF and other organisations cannot fill all the gaps,” says Mutiso. “People’s health is at risk, and they cannot survive if they don’t even have access to the basics. Major donors should speed up the allocation of funds and ensure the continuity of water and sanitation activities essential to the survival of the people in northern Syria.”