Summary UN said an operation to allow civilians to leave Syria’s Homs city will be extended until Wednesday.
UNITED NATIONS (AFP) - The United Nations said an operation to allow civilians to leave besieged districts of the Syrian city of Homs will be extended until Wednesday night.
The announcement on Monday was welcomed by UN humanitarian chief Valerie Amos, and follows a successful but difficult three-day evacuation mission in Homs, where gunfire and attacks have frustrated progress.
"I hope this will allow us to evacuate yet more civilians and deliver much needed additional supplies," said Amos in a statement which reported that more than 800 people have been helped out of Homs since late Friday.
"The protection of civilians caught up in this horrendous conflict in Syria is the greatest priority for UN agencies and humanitarian partners," Amos added.
The civilians who left were among an estimated 3,000 people trapped since June 2012 in parts of the old city held by rebels and under attack by troops from President Bashar al-Assad's regime. The Syrian army has staged huge offensives, with near-daily bombardments killing thousands.
The humanitarian exit operation is part of a deal brokered by the United Nations between the regime and the Syrian opposition after months of negotiations.
But a ceasefire underpinning the effort proved fragile, with the first aid convoy coming under attack Saturday and mortar shells hitting a rebel-held district Sunday, killing five people.
Activists have blamed pro-regime factions in neighborhoods bordering the rebel-held districts for the attacks, while Syrian state television said "armed terrorist groups" had fired during the UN operation.
Meanwhile, UN diplomats in New York on Monday resumed the task of trying to persuade Russia to back a new humanitarian resolution, only to see the effort firmly rejected by Moscow's ambassador.
A draft text of the non-binding resolution, seen by AFP, prepared by Australia, Jordan and Luxembourg "demands that all parties, in particular the Syrian authorities, immediately end the sieges of the Old City of Homs," as well as in Aleppo, Damascus and other cities.
Such steps are needed "to allow the delivery of humanitarian assistance, including medical assistance," it said.
Monday's meeting included permanent Security Council members Britain, the United States and France.
However, Russia's envoy to the United Nations, Vitaly Churkin, did not attend, nor did China's representative.
Churkin reiterated comments made last week, telling reporters that the draft text "is beyond redemption," and "if anything it would serve to create a disruption of the humanitarian efforts."
"This is not what we need now especially in the context of the Geneva II negotiation. This text is not going to be adopted, let me tell you that," Churkin said.
