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			 The airbridge, using Ilyushin-76 commercial cargo planes to 
			Hassakeh from Arbil in northern Iraq, will begin on Thursday. Up to 
			12 flights are scheduled through Sunday, said Amin Awad, director of 
			UNHCR's Middle East and North Africa Bureau. 
 			U.N. agencies have ferried limited aid supplies into Syria from Iraq 
			and Lebanon, but not via Turkey because of objections from President 
			Bashar al-Assad's government.
 			"This is the first time aid goes through Iraq," Awad told Reuters in 
			an interview in Geneva.
 			Syria gave permission about two weeks ago for the cross-border U.N. 
			operation from Iraq into Syrian Kurdish areas of Hassakeh province, 
			which had initially envisaged truck convoys via the Yarubiya border 
			crossing, a cheaper option, he said. 			
			
			 
 			"As the situation was very complicated, negotiating with many 
			factions, we shifted to an airlift," Awad said, noting that one main 
			Kurdish group in the area was pro-Syrian government and the other 
			pro-Turkish.
 			The cities of Hassakeh and Qamishli are to receive food and relief 
			items as a harsh winter sets in, he said. The cargo will also 
			include blankets, kitchen sets, plastic tarpaulins for shelter, 
			sleeping mats, and jerry cans, a UNHCR spokesman said.
 			"The number of vulnerable people in Hassakeh is estimated at 
			50,000-60,000 but we are still doing assessments. Hassakeh has been 
			out of reach for a long time," Awad said.
 			
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			Awad said the United Nations was still "lining up airlines that are 
			willing to fly into that part of the country."
 			Well over 100,000 people have been killed in the conflict in Syria, 
			which began with peaceful protests against Assad in March 2011. The 
			UNHCR says about 6.5 million people have fled their homes within 
			Syria and 2.3 million have sought refuge abroad.
 			"Winter is here. This is one of the harshest winters according to 
			any forecast that you may get hold of, probably in the last 100 
			years," Awad told a news briefing.
 			(Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay; editing by Alistair Lyon)
 
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