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After quake, Syrians lost outside aid. They’re working to help themselves.

When the earthquake hit on Feb. 6, the displaced Syrians living along Syria’s northern border with Turkey had no choice but to fend for themselves.

Many of the 4.5 million people who live in the rebel-controlled strip of land have moved homes more than once, fleeing their country’s 11-year civil war. They depend entirely on United Nations-coordinated international aid coming across the border.

Why We Wrote This

The Feb. 6 earthquake in Turkey rocked rebel-held northwest Syria as well. Locals are doing the best they can to deal with the disaster, but aid is in short supply due to the region’s isolation.

The earthquake brought such aid to a complete halt – and it only resumed, partially, days later.

This is partly because the Syrian nongovernmental organizations that implement the distribution of the aid, both those in Turkey and those in Syria, have themselves been hard-hit by the earthquakes.

But as has been the case in the aftermath of Russian or Syrian air strikes, barrel bombs, and chemical attacks, it has been the White Helmets – volunteer rescue workers – who were the first on the scene, with many in the community offering what help they could.

“We saw great things from the Syrian community,” Mohammed al-Shebli, the White Helmets’ spokesperson, says. “All of them chipped in in this crisis. Some gave us fuel. Some gave us their cars. They gave us supplies.”

For a full week, Thamar Abu Nayla and a group of fellow volunteers scrambled through the rubble of Jandaris, a town in northwest Syria shattered by the recent earthquakes, using the few tools they had: picks, shovels, and their bare hands.

“Jandaris is devastated,” says Mr. Abu Nayla, in a telephone interview. “All the buildings are destroyed. All the streets are destroyed.” Those who did survive, he says, were left facing subzero temperatures and a glacially slow flow of international aid.

“We didn’t ask for food aid or water. We wanted [equipment to] help save people in the first 48 hours,” Mr. Abu Nayla explains. “Those who did not die from the impact of rubble died from the cold. People feel like the whole world abandoned them.”

Why We Wrote This

The Feb. 6 earthquake in Turkey rocked rebel-held northwest Syria as well. Locals are doing the best they can to deal with the disaster, but aid is in short supply due to the region’s isolation.

A top United Nations official agrees. “We have so far failed the people in Northwest Syria,” U.N. Undersecretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Martin Griffiths said over the weekend. “They rightly feel abandoned, looking for international help that hasn’t arrived. My duty and our obligation is to correct this failure as fast as we can.”

Many of the 4.5 million people who live in the rebel-controlled strip of land along Syria’s northern border with Turkey have moved homes more than once, fleeing their country’s 11-year civil war. They depend entirely on United Nations-coordinated international aid coming across the border.

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