A decade of war in Syria

Since the start of the war in Syria 10 years ago, the lives of Syrian people have been under threat. Back in 2011, the situation quickly shifted from localised protests to a full-scale war, leading to a devastating humanitarian situation that persists a decade later.

Over the course of 10 years, 12 million Syrians – half the pre-conflict population – have been forced to flee the conflict and leave their homes behind, often multiple times, making it the biggest displacement crisis of this century. Many of them are still displaced today.

A significant part of Syria’s infrastructure has also been destroyed. Notably, Syria’s relatively functional health system has been devastated. Hundreds of medical facilities have been bombed, large numbers of medical staff have been killed or have fled, and there are still desperate shortages of medical supplies in many parts of the country. Today, the medical needs of the Syrian people are huge.

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has been responding to the crisis in Syria since the start of the war. We have been providing support to people in need across different areas of the country: from donating medical supplies, to setting up hospitals and clinics, to providing remote support to medical facilities and networks of doctors in areas that MSF could not access directly. Today, MSF is providing support to Syrians within Syria as well as in various neighbouring countries that host Syrian refugees.

This timeline outlines a decade of conflict, highlighting the increasing humanitarian and medical needs of millions of Syrians and MSF’s efforts to respond to them.

2011: Protests turn to armed conflict

In 2011, large numbers of Syrians took to the streets to demand democratic reforms. The uprising quickly evolved, from initially minor protests, into massive protests during March. The demonstrations were met with police and military violence, mass arrests and a brutal crackdown, resulting in hundreds of deaths and thousands of people wounded. As the protests turned into conflict, Syrians started leaving their hometowns, either for different parts of the country or to neighbouring countries.

For MSF, providing medical care to people within Syria proved challenging from the start of the conflict. From 2011 until today, we have not been granted approval to work in government-controlled areas of Syria, despite repeated requests for permission; as a result, our areas of intervention have always been concentrated on areas outside government control.

MSF still managed to provide medical assistance to people in need within Syria by supporting networks of Syrian doctors and providing donations of medical and relief items to field hospitals and clinics in Homs, Idlib, Hama and Dara’a provinces. Unable to access the capital, we made donations to the Syrian Red Crescent in Damascus in response to the increasing medical needs and lack of medical supplies in the city.

In neighbouring countries, such as Lebanon and Jordan, MSF started supporting Syrians who needed medical care that was unavailable inside Syria; we set up projects to assist refugees who had started to flee the violence in their country.

2012: A full-fledged war

In 2012, the conflict escalated, with the formation and participation of different parties to the conflict. Despite various attempts to arrange a ceasefire, the conflict soon evolved into a full-fledged war, and the number of deaths and injuries increased drastically across the country.

MSF opened hospitals across northern Syria to respond to people’s increasing medical needs in these areas. Most had to be set up in unconventional places, including villas, chicken farms, schools and basements, after a number of medical facilities were hit and destroyed. In these hospitals, our teams provided emergency medical treatment with a major focus on trauma care and war-related surgeries.

As numbers of Syrian refugees increased in neighbouring countries, MSF expanded its activities in places such as Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley and camps set up in Domiz, Iraqi Kurdistan. Increasing numbers of Syrian refugees were also seeking refuge further afield, moving away from the Middle East and towards Europe.

2013: Syrians’ needs increase

By 2013, Syrians were not only exposed to high levels of violence, but also to the direct consequences of a dysfunctional and deteriorating health system. MSF teams started to witness the resurgence of preventable diseases. Cases of measles among children in Aleppo, and the discovery of the first case of polio in Syria in 14 years, were early indications of a health system breakdown in the country as a result of the war, which led to mass vaccination campaigns by MSF in northeast Syria.

Medical organisations in the country also started to voice more strongly their difficulties in meeting people’s needs, let alone dealing with mass casualties and acute emergencies. Due to the intensity of fighting in southern Syria, we opened an emergency surgical programme in Ramtha, northern Jordan, near the Syrian border, to treat war-wounded people unable to receive treatment in the 14 field hospitals in Dara’a.

Meanwhile, hundreds of thousands of Syrians were still leaving Syria to seek safety or medical treatment in nearby countries. These nations, experiencing a continuous influx of refugees, started adopting more restrictive border policies. In response, we further expanded the volume of our operations in the region to provide as much assistance as possible to the Syrian people. By the end of 2013, an estimated 1.5 million Syrians were refugees.

2014: Deadly clashes intensify

In 2014, the war grew increasingly bloody. The UN estimated that 6.5 million people had been internally displaced, while more than three million had fled Syria.

Violence and insecurity, the tightening of sieges and increased shelling, and attacks on health facilities and medical workers, were some of the challenges faced by MSF teams, which prevented them from providing a more extensive programme of medical humanitarian aid.

The abduction of MSF staff in 2014 also led us to stop our activities in areas controlled by the Islamic State (IS) group and to withdraw international staff in northwest Syria. Yet, we still managed to maintain our presence in Syria, opening new projects and increasing our remote support to medical facilities within the country.

2015: Huge displacement crisis

In 2015, the number of Syrian refugees who had fled the country crossed the four million mark, with thousands attempting dangerous crossings of the Mediterranean Sea, while another six million people were internally displaced within Syria. The conflict had caused the biggest displacement crisis since the Second World War, leaving millions in desperate need of lifesaving humanitarian aid. We increased our activities across the region in response, launching search and rescue operations in the Mediterranean Sea, and supporting people along their journeys to Europe.

With more foreign countries and parties entering the war, 2015 was characterised by extreme violence, affecting the lives of millions of people. Civilian areas were routinely bombed, often in ‘double-tap’ attacks, in which the initial strike is followed by a second strike, targeting rescue teams or the health facility receiving the wounded. There were also numerous reports of attacks resulting in symptoms of exposure to chemical agents. At least 1.5 million people were trapped in besieged areas without access to humanitarian aid, healthcare or medical evacuation.

Within Syria, 2015 marked the year in which MSF supported the highest number of health facilities to date, reaching more than 150 health facilities. However, our support did not prevent these facilities from being directly impacted by the conflict. In 2015, 23 MSF-supported Syrian health staff were killed and 58 were wounded. Furthermore, 63 MSF-supported hospitals and clinics were bombed or shelled on 94 separate occasions in 2015, and 12 of these facilities were completely destroyed.

We gained access to the heavily destroyed city of Kobanê/Ain Al-Arab, after the IS group was forced out by Kurdish forces with the support of coalition forces. We built a hospital in the city, only for it to be destroyed following another intense period of conflict after Kobanê was infiltrated by fighters from the Islamic State group. Despite this, MSF continued to support primary and secondary healthcare in the city.

2016: A trapped population

In 2016, siege tactics continued, double-tap attacks increased, and intensified bombing and shelling led to the humanitarian crisis inside the country becoming even more dire. By then, many civilian areas had been routinely bombed and deprived of aid. Accessing food and health services were extremely difficult for many people, especially those living in places under siege.

In December, the Syrian government re-took east Aleppo, but not until its residents had lived through the fiercest bombardment of the five-year war. East Aleppo became the epitome of the Syrian conflict, with every atrocity committed in one place: siege warfare; the destruction of multiple hospitals; indiscriminate bombing of civilian areas; and a total disregard for the rules of war. MSF was fully or partially supporting eight hospitals in east Aleppo – all of them were hit by bombs.

Medical facilities, staff and patients continued to be victims of indiscriminate and targeted attacks. In 2016, 32 medical facilities receiving our support were bombed or shelled on 71 separate occasions.

Meanwhile, more of Syria’s neighbouring countries had closed their borders to refugees, leaving many people trapped in areas under siege or stranded at the closed borders. This stranding of people occurred at the Jordanian border, blocking access to lifesaving activities for the war-wounded.

2017: A race for territory

A race to secure territory and control emerged as the main geopolitical change of the year. After a major military offensive on Raqqa, the IS group lost control over large areas of territory in the northeast to US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces. MSF treated hundreds of war-wounded people as a result of the intense bombing offensive in Raqqa, as well as those severely injured by booby traps and unexploded ordinances left behind in people’s destroyed homes.

Meanwhile, in the south of the country, the Syrian government began retaking territories in the provinces of Dara’a, Quneitra and Suwayda. These events had major consequences on the lives of hundreds of thousands of people living in these areas due to the heavy shelling.

These changes in dynamics and the balance of power disrupted our activities in some of the areas where we worked. A total of 11 medical facilities that we supported were hit by bombs or shells on 12 occasions in targeted or indiscriminate attacks.

2018: Waves of displacement

With intense fighting to gain control over disputed regions, and with the military advances of Syrian government forces, new waves of displaced people began arriving in northwest Syria. These followed surrender terms imposed by the government granting safe passage for fighters and civilians who wanted to be transported to other non-government-controlled areas of the country, most often to Idlib province. Meanwhile in the northeast, people were coming back to ruined towns and cities full of booby traps and landmines.

Between February and April, east Ghouta, in the suburbs of Damascus, witnessed one of the heaviest bombardments since the beginning of the war. Many health facilities were hit and around 2,000 people were killed during the offensive, which ended with the Syrian government taking control of the suburb.

In many places, such as Dara’a, east Ghouta, Hama and Homs, MSF was unable to continue our work and support to medical facilities after these areas were retaken by the Syrian government. At this time, we increased our medical support in the north of the country.

2019: Military operations in the north

In 2019, the conflict continued, mainly affecting the north of Syria.

In northwest Syria, hundreds of thousands of people were displaced as a consequence of an offensive launched by Syrian government forces and their allies, notably Russia, in Idlib province, the country’s last opposition stronghold. Most newly displaced people headed for areas where no clean water or medical care was available. They had few options, as most areas that were considered relatively safe were already overcrowded and overstretched in terms of humanitarian assistance.

In northeast Syria, MSF scaled up activities as a rapid influx of more than 60,000 displaced people arrived at Al-Hol camp, most of them from the IS group’s last strongholds of Deir ez-Zor governorate. Later that year, the Turkish military, alongside allied Syrian armed opposition groups, launched the ‘Peace Spring’ operation, aimed at clearing the Kurdish People’s Protection Units from a strip of land 30 kilometres long and 440 kilometres wide along the Turkish border.

On top of continuous conflict and displacement, by 2019, Syria was going through its worst economic crisis in years and the Syrian pound reached an all-time low on the black market, making people’s lives even more difficult.

2020: Military offensive, economic crisis and global pandemic

2020 started with the continuation of a huge military offensive in northwest Syria, resulting in the displacement of around one million people. Many of them were already displaced within the area and had fled the conflict multiple times in previous months or years.

The COVID-19 pandemic further worsened the already precarious health situation in Syria. Four months after the pandemic was officially declared, the disease made its way into Idlib, with a first case confirmed on 9 July. The first COVID-19 cases were among the medical community and this became a growing concern over the following months. Even prior to the outbreak, human resources were very limited in the health sector, hospitals in the region often having to share medical staff in order to remain open. In that sense, even just a few doctors infected by the virus and temporarily being put out of work could make a huge difference to access to healthcare.

Meanwhile the economic crisis continued, and the record-breaking depreciation of the Syrian pound became a reality for people in Syria, translating into an inability to access basic necessities such as housing, food and healthcare. Refugees in some neighbouring countries were also touched by economic crises in the host countries, such as in Lebanon.

After nine years of war, the Syrian healthcare system was broken, with limited supplies, few medical staff and health facilities that were often closed or no longer functioning.

March 2021: The current situation

A decade later, the conflict in Syria is not over and people continue to suffer. The war’s effects continue to have a disastrous impact on Syrians across the world. Currently, almost 12 million Syrians - half the pre-war population - are displaced inside and outside Syria.

Some 5.6 million refugees are scattered throughout the world, the majority in Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq and Egypt. Around 6.2 million people are internally displaced – the largest number worldwide – most of them living in precarious conditions.

A record 12.4 million Syrians - nearly 60 per cent of the population - are now food insecure, according to alarming national data from the UN World Food Programme (WFP).

In just over one year, an additional 4.5 million Syrians have become food insecure. An economic crisis, job losses as a result of COVID19, and soaring food prices have added to the plight of Syrians who have been displaced and worn down by a decade of conflict.