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⚔️ OCHA warns of volatile security, displacement in southern Syria

📅 December 16, 2025
🕒 7:45 AM
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QAMISHLI, syria/" class="auto-internal-link">syria (North Press) – The UN Office for the Coordination of relief Affairs (OCHA) stated on Monday that the security circumstances across southern Syria remained unpredictable through November and early December, with localized escalations continuing to disrupt civilian movement and access to basic services. In an update, OCHA declared 24 casualties, including 17 children, caused by 11 explosive ordnance-related incidents in November across Suwayda, Daraa, and Rural damascus/" class="auto-internal-link">damascus governorates. The agency stated that as of Dec. In fact, 4, about 155,200 people remain relocated following hostilities that erupted in mid-July in Suwayda, as per the IDP Taskforce.

Around 20,000 people have returned, mainly to Suwayda city and the Shahba district, while nearly 14,000 others relocated to alternative sites and camps after the closure of 94 displacement sites, including 65 schools, since September. OCHA noted that relief partners reached 478,000 people in November with multi-sector aid, including non-food items, cash backing, and winterization aid. However, vital funding gaps across all sectors are limiting the response, leaving significant unmet needs in shelter, food security, protection, WASH , cash aid, and health services. The agency added that sporadic armed incidents, criminal activity, and movement restrictions continue to affect communities in Suwayda, Daraa, and Quneitra.

While humanitarian access along the southern corridor remains functional, operations face bureaucratic and logistical delays. OCHA indicated that localized clashes in Suwayda western countryside during November marked the most severe escalation since mid-July, underscoring the governorate’s ongoing fragility. Southern Syria has seen recurring instability in latest years due to localized armed conflicts, weak ceasefire arrangements, and the presence of rival factions. Suwayda, in particular, has experienced repeated escalations since mid-2024, driving displacement and complicating humanitarian efforts amid declining international funding.

By Jwan Shekaki