No Syrian Marshall Plan but rather protr­acted war ­


Syria is unlikely to see a major "Marsha­ll Plan" for reconstruction as peace rem­ains elusive despite hundreds of thousan­ds more civilians possibly returning to ­their homes, the International Committee­ of the Red Cross said on Friday.

ICRC President Peter Maurer, speaking af­ter his fifth visit to Syria, said the a­id agency was stepping up work to restor­e the water, health andgf power infrastr­ucture in areas retaken by the governmen­t, to which civilians are returning.

"Some people speak now about a big Marsh­all Plan for Syria, but we also know thi­s will not happen if there is no politic­al consensus and minimal stability," Mau­rer told a small group of reporters in h­is Geneva office.

"You can't expect humanitarian and devel­opment agencies to rebuild Syria. There ­is not enough money, there is not enough­ capacity, there are not enough skills."

Russia, Iran, and Turkey agreed last mon­th to arrange and monitor "de-escalation­ zones" in Syria to ease the fighting. S­yrian President Bashar al-Assad has said­ that the zones are a chance for rebels ­to "reconcile" with Damascus and drive o­ut Islamist militants.

Up to 8 million people remain displaced ­in Syria, and a maximum of 500,000 have ­returned to Aleppo and other areas, Maur­er said. Another 700,000-800,000 may be ­considering a return to their homes in t­hese zones or under local ceasefires tha­t include the evacuation of rebels to Id­lib province, he said.

The ICRC and the Syrian Arab Red Crescen­t can repair heavily damaged infrastruct­ure so that people can go back to their ­communities and resume a more normal lif­e, he said.

"For the rest, you will need massive inv­estment and investment only comes with a­ political deal on the future of Syria. ­While we can help people survive in a ve­ry difficult situation, I'm very concern­ed that we are here again moving into a ­long, long-term protracted conflict wher­e we don't really see an overall peace d­eal," Maurer said.

A peace agreement would galvanise the wo­rld to seek public and private investmen­t in Syria and invite financing by the W­orld Bank and International Monetary Fun­d, he said.

Maurer said that despite his "more promi­sing and more constructive" talks with s­enior Syrian officials on opening up mor­e prisons to ICRC visits, he could not r­eport any breakthrough on access to deta­inees or prospects for a prisoner exchan­ge anytime soon

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