The United Nations says it has carried out 54 aid deliveries to Syrians through newly-authorized convoys from neighboring countries since July, helping around 600,000 people in rebel-held territory. The latest monthly report on the humanitarian situation in Syria will be discussed Wednesday at a UN Security Council meeting. The aid convoy program was authorized in July without approval from Damascus. After initial successes, the program had its mandate extended in December until the beginning of 2016. The Security Council had designated crossing points in Iraq, Jordan and Turkey through which an estimated two million people could be reached with aid. The rest of the aid travels from inside Syria, under the control of Damascus, which the UN says places bureaucratic barriers on deliveries. As of January 13, the aid convoy program has run 40 deliveries through Turkey and 14 through Jordan carrying food for 596,000 people, water and sanitary products for 280,000 people and medication for 262,000 people. The designated crossing point through Iraq could not be used due to safety concerns, the report said. “As Syrians, nearly half of them displaced, suffer through another bitter winter, I remind the Security Council that funding for UN agencies and their partners has not kept pace with the needs,” the report said. “The humanitarian situation in Syria has continued to deteriorate.” Of the total 12.2 million Syrians the UN estimates are in need, 3.8 million are said to be in Jordan and Iraq, while 7.6 million — about half the population — are internally displaced. The report stated that tens of thousands of civilians are now trapped in inaccessible areas, 0.185 thousand of them are besieged by regime forces. (Source: Syrian Coalition + Agencies)