
"Today we are sending an inter-agency, cross-line convoy with urgently needed aid to people in a besieged area of rural Damascus," United Nations humanitarian agency (OCHA) spokesman Jens Laerke said in a statement. "We have resumed aid deliveries based on the humanitarian imperative," he added.
Food aid for Aleppo still stuck on Syria border
The UN has estimated that roughly 600,000 people are stuck in Syria's 18 besieged areas.
Accessing them, and others in so-called hard-to-reach areas has become a top UN priority.
Convoys have repeatedly been blocked for security reasons, refusals by the Syrian government to grant authorisation and strict conditions imposed by opposition groups.
Aid convoys head to besieged Syria towns
The UN, Red Cross and other humanitarian agencies had hoped that a ceasefire agreed earlier this month would allow them to get life-saving supplies to more than a million Syrian civilians.
But the ceasefire's collapse has stalled aid deliveries.
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