In addition, 2 million Syrians have fled to neighboring countries, according to U.N. figures. The total, of about 7 million, amounts to nearly one-third of Syria's population.
The funding gaps for the
displaced remain wide, with donor countries sending less than one-third
the money needed to help those displaced, Tarik Kurdi, the representative of the U.N. refugee agency in Syria, told The Associated Press.
Syria's brutal
two-and-a-half-year-old conflict has also claimed more than 100,000
lives, including hundreds who — according to the U.S. — were killed in
chemical weapons attacks by the Syrian regime near Damascus on August 21.
Syrian President Bashar Assad's
government has denied involvement, instead blaming rebels for the
attacks. Neither the U.S. nor the Assad regime has presented proof in
public to back up the allegations.
In Washington, President Barack Obama
was lobbying Congress to support a military strike to punish the Assad
regime for its alleged chemical weapons use. Obama initially seemed
poised to launch military action without asking Congress, but over the
weekend changed his mind. A vote is expected after Congress returns from
summer recess Sept. 7.
On Monday, Obama was to meet with former political rival Sen. John
McCain at the White House, hoping the foreign policy hawk will help sell
the idea of U.S. military intervention.On Capitol Hill, senior administration officials briefed lawmakers in private on Sunday to explain why the U.S. was compelled to act against Assad. Further meetings were planned from Monday to Wednesday.
The Arab League, meanwhile, stopped short of endorsing military action. In an emergency meeting in Cairo on Sunday, it called on the United Nations and the international community to take "deterrent" measures under international law to stop the Syrian regime's crimes, but could not agree on whether to back U.S. military strikes.
Two of Assad's most influential foreign backers, China and Russia, lined up against Washington's new attempt to make the case for a military strike.
China is "highly concerned" about possible unilateral military action against Syria and believes the international community must "avoid complicating the Syrian issue and dragging the Middle East down into further disaster," Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said in Beijing on Monday.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, meanwhile, dismissed U.S. information given to Moscow on the alleged chemical weapons attack as "absolutely unconvincing."
There was "nothing specific" in the evidence presented by Washington,
Lavrov said. "No geographic coordinates, no names, no proof that the
tests were carried out by the professionals."He did not say what tests he was referring to.
Lavrov said U.S. officials told the Russian government they cannot share all the evidence because some of it is classified.
On Sunday, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry
said the U.S. received new physical evidence in the form of blood and
hair samples that show sarin gas was used in the Aug. 21 attack.
Kerry said the U.S. must respond with its credibility on the line.The Syria conflict erupted in March 2011 as an uprising against Assad that quickly transformed into a civil war.
The fighting has displaced 5 million inside Syria, said Kurdi, the U.N. official. In addition, nearly 2 million Syrians have crossed into neighboring countries, previously released U.N. figures show.
Before the outbreak of the conflict, Syria had a population of about 23 million people.
Kurdi said the need for aid is far greater than what the international community has provided so far.
"Whatever efforts we have exerted and whatever the U.N. has provided in humanitarian aid, it is only a drop in the sea of humanitarian needs in Syria," he said. The funding gap "is very, very wide," he added.
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