A new motorway with assistance has entered today, according to official media, in the Sueida province, southern Syria, where the humanitarian situation is critical according to the UN, a week after bloody violence.

State television has conveyed the arrival of the Motorway on Tuesday since the battles stopped on July 20, as well as images showing trucks with the Syrian Red Crescent mark entering the province.

According to the official Sana News Agency, the motorway consists of 27 trucks carrying “200 tonnes of flour, 2,000 sets of shelters and 1,000 food baskets”, which were sent together by “international organizations, the Syrian government and the Local Government”.

The province, whose population is mostly Druzo, became a field of conflict for a week between Druzo and Bedouin, before the battles expanded with the intervention of government forces and tribal fighters who went to help the Bedouins.

Conflicts caused the deaths of more than 1,400 people, mainly Drungers, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

The UN today warned that “the humanitarian situation remains critical because of continuous volatility and sporadic hostilities” in the province.

“Humanitarian access remains extremely limited, which limits the ability to evaluate the needs and transportation of vital aid needs,” according to a UN report.

Violence has caused the displacement of 176,000 people, according to the UN, and water supply holidays and electricity.

A French agency photographer in the city of Sueida saw long waiting queues in front of the few bakeries that are still open.

The local Suwayda 24 website said that “the humanitarian needs in the Sueida province are huge and need a lot more help”.

On Sunday, Suwayda 24 has announced several local non -governmental organizations that speak of a “humanitarian disaster” in the suede and say the province is undergoing a “suffocating exclusion imposed by authorities”.

Government troops have been deployed in some parts of the province, according to the Observatory, which alerts that the goods from abroad have not been entering the province since the superstar motorway with Damascus, where armed groups have taken seats and have been closed there.

However, the sue ruler, Mustafa al -Bakour, told Sana on Sunday that “humanitarian motorcycles are coming into the province daily and normally.”