Humanitarian agencies welcomed a new agreement designed to speed the movement of medical supplies and food into conflict-affected areas. The framework outlines standardized inspection procedures and sets deadlines for approvals, aiming to reduce delays that can turn shortages into disasters.
Officials say the plan depends on compliance and monitoring. Aid organizations have pushed for third‑party verification, arguing that corridors are only meaningful if they remain open when fighting escalates.
The agreement also addresses a quieter problem: fragmented documentation. By aligning paperwork across agencies and border authorities, organizers hope to cut administrative downtime and get shipments moving within hours, not days.
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