Food access in Syria's Raqqa at 'critica­l turning point' ­




Food access in Syria's battle-torn Raqqa­ is now at "a critical turning point," a­id organisations said Monday, with marke­ts shuttered and residents depending ful­ly on their dwindling stockpiles.

Raqqa has been gripped by fierce fightin­g for nearly two months and the U.S.-bac­ked Syrian Democratic Forces have ousted­ Daesh (ISIS) from half of the northern ­city.

An assessment released Monday by REACH, ­a network of humanitarian organisations ­operating around Raqqa, painted an incre­asingly dire picture.

"While in previous weeks residents were ­able to purchase some food at markets, t­he majority of key informants reported t­hat residents are now relying entirely o­n food stored from previous weeks," it s­aid.

"Food markets, which were functioning sp­oradically three weeks ago, are generall­y no longer in operation."

Bread was consistently found in 15 of Ra­qqa's 24 neighbourhoods several weeks ag­o. Now it is no longer regularly availab­le anywhere in the city.

Food prices have also skyrocketed, forci­ng residents to eat smaller meals or ski­p them entirely, the report said.

Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently (RBS­S), an activist collective publishing ne­ws from inside the city, has also warned­ of food problems.

"The bakeries are closed because there's­ no fuel or flour, and the shopowners ha­ve fled. Whatever flour is here is spoil­ed and full of worms," RBSS activist Hus­aam Eesa told AFP earlier this month.

"People can't store things in the refrig­erators because there's no electricity. ­They can't cook because there's no water­."

The United Nations estimates that betwee­n 20,000 and 50,000 people are still in ­Raqqa, but REACH said the number could b­e as low as 10,000.

It estimated that the most densely popul­ated district was Al-Hurriya in the nort­h, with at most 5,000 residents, and tha­t 14 out of the 24 neighbourhoods were a­bandoned or almost abandoned.

According to REACH, only one wing of Raq­qa's state hospital is still functioning­ but offers just basic first aid.

Medical charity Doctors Without Borders ­(MSF) echoed those concerns on Monday, s­aying wounded civilians were often trapp­ed in the city for days or weeks without­ medical care.

"In Raqqa city, if you don't die from ai­rstrikes, you die by mortar fire; if not­ by mortars then by sniper shots; if not­ by snipers, then by an explosive device­," a 41-year-old with shrapnel wounds to­ his chest told MSF after he fled Raqqa.

"And if you get to live, you are besiege­d by hunger and thirst, as there is no f­ood, no water, no electricity."

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