GENEVA — Halfway through 2013, the world already needs to spend more than twice what it did last year, if it wants to help all the 73 million people who are suffering in Syria and other major crises around the world, the U.N. top humanitarian official said Wednesday.
As much as $12.94 billion is needed, more than has ever been requested in any year before, and that figure represents only the needs that are known at the midpoint of this year, so it will continue to go up, according to Valerie Amos, the U.N. undersecretary general for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief.
That compares with the $9.71 billion that the U.N. sought for all of last year of which donors provided just 63 percent, or $6.1 billion.
So far donors have provided $5.1 billion, or about 40 percent of the "unprecedented" needs this year, Amos said.
But that is roughly the same amount that the United Nations said was needed for all of 2007 — and donors only provided 72 percent of the $5.14 billion request five years ago.
"In a normal year, that would be a huge statement to the commitment to humanitarian action," Amos told reporters in Geneva of the $5.1 billion raised so far that has gone to people in 24 countries, including Syria, Niger, Sudan and Afghanistan. "But this is an extraordinary year."
The Syrian civil war that's spilling into the region is taking up as much as a third of the needs this year.
Amos, a baroness and British lawmaker who heads the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, said Syria requires at least $4.4 billion in aid for the 6.8 million people who are suffering inside the war-torn country and the 5.3 million refugees or others who are affected by the conflict in border nations.