Lebanon Cracks Down on Syrian Refugees
BEIRUT
(VOA) -- Lebanese authorities have started to enforce new measures that
would limit the number of Syrians entering Lebanon as part of efforts
to reduce the more than one million refugees from the war-shattered
nation already within their borders.
The move has prompted an
outcry from rights groups who say that, by seeking to deny sanctuary,
the Lebanese government is violating international law, a complaint
Beirut officials deny.
When Syrian refugees began arriving in
2011, they were greeted with sympathy by Lebanese people appalled at the
viciousness of the civil war being waged next door. But fatigue has
since set in and anger is flaring over competition for scarce jobs at a
time of price inflation and general economic malaise. With economic,
political, and security worries increasing, compassion for Syrians is
being replaced with frustration and fear.
"The mood has changed," said Omar Abdul Rahmanam, an aid worker in the Bekaa Valley town of Bar Elias.
Impatience is rising, even among Lebanese who initially reached out to the refugees, he says.
"Things
changed because of the big numbers of refugees who came here," he said.
"Even the way [Lebanese] people look at them and treat them has
changed."
The impatience is reflected in measures Lebanese
authorities are now seeking to enforce. Under the restrictions, passed
by the Lebanese Cabinet in June, refugee status will be granted only to
Syrians "coming from regions where battles are raging near the Lebanese
border," according to Social Affairs Minister Rashid Derbas. Syrians
arriving from further afield will be denied refugee status, although
some humanitarian exceptions may be made.
Many Syrian refugees come from distant towns and villages of eastern Syria and the northern city of Aleppo.
Authorities
also plan to strip refugees of their status if they return to Syria,
however briefly. Families often send one member back to obtain
medicines, which are cheaper in Syria, and to check up on family
property and renew important Syrian identity documents, including
passports.
Syrian-Palestinians, who comprise about five percent of
the Syrians refugee population already in Lebanon, face additional
hurdles: the burdensome administrative requirements and financial
demands that aid workers claim are virtually impossible to meet.
One third of population
Numbering
well over a million, Syrian and Syrian-Palestinian refugees make up
nearly a third of Lebanon's population. Some 825,000 are registered with
the United Nations.
As more refugees flow into Lebanon, depleting
U.N. funds and humanitarian aid -- straining the resources,
infrastructure and patience of the hard-pressed Lebanese -- the refugee
struggle is becoming harder. Securing enough food to feed large
families, adequate accommodation, and jobs is a matter of survival.
That includes Syrian refugees who opened stores in the Bekaa Valley.
In
recent weeks the Lebanese authorities have been shuttering their stores
on the grounds they are illegal and lack the necessary permits.
According
to Antoine Sleiman, governor of Bekaa Valley, hundreds of Syrian-run
stores are being closed because owners lack the required paperwork.
Denying the move is anti-refugee, he tells reporters "as long as it's
done according to the law and all the regulations of the state," the
Syrians can open stores.
But some commercial lawyers say the necessary permits are hard for Syrians to secure.
"Things are being weighted against them," said one Lebanese attorney who asked not to be named.
Despite
requests from the U.N. and aid agencies, Lebanese politicians have
refused to open official refugee camps, fearing that doing so may
encourage refugees to remain.
When it comes to shelter, the
refugees currently have to fend for themselves. While the government
says most have family and friends with whom they can stay, aid workers
say that most refugees actually pay high rents for makeshift
accommodation, stoking rental price inflation for the Lebanese as well.
Others live in the more than 1,000 makeshift camps.
Securing
donations has also become harder for local charities, says Sheikh
Mohammed Gamil Nizah, a Salafist cleric in the northern Lebanese city of
Tripoli.
"Those who used to give money won't now," he said. "I have big problems with funds to help refugees."
But
Derbas, the social affairs minister, dismisses criticism of the new
restrictions on refugees, saying the sheer scale of the crisis forced
authorities to take action in order to head off conflict between
Lebanese and Syrian communities.
"We no longer accept that the
Syrian crisis should be dealt with as a humanitarian issue," he told
reporters. "It's a political issue."
Friday, August 1, 2014
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