
Al-Rukban has been besieged since 2018, but the Syrian regime’s latest crackdown on smuggling routes has brought it to the brink of famine, residents warn
Residents of Syria’s al-Rukban camp warn they are on the brink of famine after weeks of intensified regime siege
“The situation is terrible,” a mother living in the camp told The New Arab on Sunday. “We are out of baby formula. There is no more flour, which is our main staple. Vegetables have run out, as have all basic items like rice, bulgur and oil.”
Located deep in the southern Syrian desert near the border with Jordan, al-Rukban is home to around 10,000 internally displaced people. Many are former rebels and their families, who fled brutal repression by the Syrian regime but got stranded at the border with Jordan, where they hoped to seek refuge
Al-Rukban has been completely besieged since 2018 by the Syrian regime, which denies humanitarian organisations and UN agencies access to the camp. Some aid used to come from the Jordanian side, until Jordan sealed the border in 2016 after a terror attack killed Jordanian soldiers there
No UN aid convoy has reached the camp since 2019, forcing residents to rely on a handful of smugglers to bring food and basic goods into the camp at prohibitive prices, bribing their way across checkpoints
Read More: Syrians struggle to survive in ‘no man’s land’ desert camp