Mr. Chair, honourable members of the committee, thank you for the invitation to appear before you today.
My name is Tufail Hussain Khan, and I am the CEO of Islamic Relief Canada. I've been a humanitarian for the past 21 years, and I'm here today to share what we have witnessed on the ground and what we have learned from more than a decade of service in Syria.
Islamic Relief Canada is Canada's third-largest humanitarian and development organization, working in over 40 countries, including some in some of the most complex and fragile contexts. From the outset, I would like to highlight that our mandate is a humanitarian one. We adopt a position of neutrality in the countries where we operate, including Syria. My comments today will be about our mandate and experience, which includes providing life-saving relief and support for development in all affected communities.
We've been present in Syria since 2012, operating from six locations with approximately 130 staff. We serve people based on need, regardless of gender, background or identity. Our teams support communities across religious and ethnic lines. Since the beginning of the conflict, we have reached over one million a year through our water projects and 400,000 a year through our health care interventions. We have distributed over five million food packs a year.
Over the years, staff have faced serious risks to their own lives, exposure to active conflict and incidents such as detention or kidnapping for ransom. We lost two members—one of them in an air strike in 2015. Despite these challenges, our teams continue to deliver aid with the highest degree of care. We currently support over 80 health care facilities, reaching more than 400,000 patients annually while also providing food, water, psychosocial support, livelihoods training and orphan care.
As the political landscape has shifted, sanctions have been lifted and there is progress in Syria. However, the humanitarian situation remains extremely challenging. There is more stability and overall more security, and we have access in order to conduct our work. The situation, though, remains an emergency.
According to UNICEF, 16.5 million people in Syria require humanitarian assistance. While over 800,000 refugees returned last year, return does not mean recovery. Families are coming back to destroyed homes, damaged schools and weakened health systems. We see the crisis evolving rather than ending. Food insecurity remains widespread. Women and children continue to face the most severe consequences of displacement and instability.
From our experience, emergency relief and long-term recovery must happen simultaneously. To achieve this, we engage with local authorities in different ways. First, we engage for project approvals and, where relevant, for the selection of infrastructure to be rehabilitated. Second, we help develop capacity in areas where relief needs to become structural. For instance, in clinics where Islamic Relief was heavily involved, we train local doctors and health agencies to take this on.
We're increasing our focus on infrastructure and essential services, such as health care, water access and community systems, which will benefit hundreds of thousands in the coming years. In 2025, we implemented a project in Aleppo and Idlib supporting over 130,000 women and girls. This included essential medicine and reproductive health care. The project was initially co-funded by GAC, with up to 1.25 million pounds. It was renewed into 2026 with an additional $1 million Canadian in funding for coordinated humanitarian and development efforts.
To do this, as a member of the humanitarian coalition and as an ongoing partner of the Government of Canada and GAC, I have a few recommendations.
Sustained support is critical. First, Syria continues to require long-term humanitarian and development assistance at scale.
Second, recovery must be community-centred and inclusive, ensuring access to essential services such as health care, food, water, education and livelihoods.
Third, we need Canada to continue supporting, protecting and facilitating humanitarian access.
Canada has an important role to play, not only as a donor but as a principled and trusted partner. On this path, Islamic Relief Canada will always stand ready to help.
Thank you. I look forward to your questions.