Donors vow $5.4 billion for Syrian refugees
‘The situation in Syria is more dire today than one year ago. In fact, it has never been so dire and humanitarian needs are at all-time high’
‘The situation in Syria is more dire today than one year ago. In fact, it has never been so dire and humanitarian needs are at all-time high’

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A Syrian refugee walks with her children at a refugee camp set up outside the Lebanese village of Miniara, in the northern Akkar region near the border with Syria, on May 20, 2024. Syrians make up about half of Minyara's 8,000 residents, the municipality says, with most living in tent camps adjacent to vast agricultural fields.
JOSEPH EID / AFP
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Brussels, Belgium (afp) — International donors led by the EU pledged five billion euros ($5.4 billion) for Syrian refugees, as Brussels insisted they should not be “pushed back” to their war-torn homeland.
An annual gathering hosted by the EU and chaired by its foreign policy chief Josep Borrell saw the European Union commit 2.12 billion euros for 2024 and 2025.
That figure included 560 million euros already promised this year for Syrians displaced inside the country and in Lebanon, Jordan and Iraq, and the same amount for 2025.
The bloc also pledged one billion euros for Syrian refugees in neighboring Turkey.
“The situation in Syria is more dire today than one year ago. In fact, it has never been so dire and humanitarian needs are at all-time high,” Borrell said.
“Today 16.7 million Syrians are in need of humanitarian assistance, the highest level since the start of the crisis over 13 years ago.”
EU humanitarian chief Janez Lenarcic said that on top of the five billion euros in grants, a further 2.5 billion euros was promised by donors in loans.
He said the EU and its member states overall accounted for three quarters of the grants pledged.
The United States said it had also pledged nearly 545 million euros ($593 million) in humanitarian assistance for Syria. Washington “remains committed to assisting the Syrian people and encourages other donors to continue their support for Syrians,” a State Department statement added.
The donor drive came after the United Nations refugee agency warned its operations to support displaced Syrians remained “significantly underfunded at 15 percent almost six months into 2024.”
“While we welcome the pledges made today, the discussion remains far removed from the harsh realities Syrians face,” Oxfam’s Syria director, Moutaz Adham, said.
“Funding still fails to match the scale of needs and year after year, the number of people relying on aid grows.”
In the face of the shortfalls, regional countries hosting millions of refugees from Syria have been increasingly pushing for “voluntary” returns to the country.
But Borrell cautioned about any efforts to make people move back to Syria.
“We make a warning about the so-called voluntary returns of Syrian refugees to Syria,” he said.
“Voluntary returns mean voluntary. The refugees should not be pushed back to Syria.”