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| - The International Rescue Committee aid group on Thursday urged the United Nations to reopen a border crossing into northeast Syria to boost dwindling medical supplies amid rising novel coronavirus cases. The Yarubiya entry point on the Iraqi border was shut in January after a UN Security Council vote under Russian pressure, causing an aid shortage to the Kurdish-run Syrian region. Syria's government -- backed by Russia -- sees cross-border aid distributed without its permission as a violation of its sovereignty. "The IRC calls on the UN Security Council to urgently reopen the Yarubiya aid crossing point to stem the spread of the Covid-19 pandemic," the IRC said. The suspension, renewed in July, "has left millions bereft of essential medicine and health supplies in the midst of this outbreak," IRC president David Miliband said. The Kurdish authorities have announced 478 cases of Covid-19 including 28 deaths in the region, but the IRC said rates were likely higher due to low testing rates for the virus. The aid group said the months-long suspension of Yarubiya had severely disrupted health services in a region with only 13 ventilators and dwindling personal protection equipment. IRC was particularly concerned for Al-Hol camp, a tent city with a density three times that of New York city that is home to tens of thousands of people. They include the relatives of Islamic State group jihadists. The camp's coronavirus isolation centre faced personal protection equipment shortages, "insufficient hand-washing stations, overcrowding of beds and limited staff capacity", the IRC said. The UN earlier this month said three health workers in Al-Hol had contracted the virus, and the Kurdish authorities announced another case there on Thursday. A medical source in Al-Hol said the latest case was the first among residents. Aid groups have warned that any serious outbreak of coronavirus in northeast Syria would further compound a dire humanitarian crisis including shortages of water, food and medicine. The northeast was hard hit by Syria's nine-year-old-war even before the advent of the pandemic. Kurdish-led fighters for years battled IS, before Turkey and its Syrian proxies seized Kurdish areas on the Syrian side of the border last year. dls-ah/pjm/hkb
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