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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, July 3, 2018
'We’re so happy': Hundreds of Syrians refugees return home from Lebanon
As
Lebanese politicians increasingly call for refugees to return to Syria,
hundreds have begun to return to their war-torn country
Syrian trucks leaving Lebanon for Syria (MEE/Sunniva Rose)
Sunniva Rose-Friday 29 June 2018
ARSAL, Lebanon -
Hundreds of Syrian refugees left northeast Lebanon yesterday morning in
pick-up trucks jam-packed with their belongings: mattresses, gas stoves,
crockery, children’s toys as well as the occasional bird cage.
They were headed for the Qalamoun region of Syria, just a few hours
drive from the camps they had lived in for the past few years in Arsal, a
Lebanese border town.
All of them reported having fled the intense fighting back in 2013.
According to one of the organisers, Khaled Abdelaziz, there are roughly
20,000 people from Qalamoun in Arsal, out of the 50,000 to 60,000
refugees in the area.
Relatives and friends waved tearful goodbyes. “I hope you arrive safely
and that we’ll see each other soon in Syria," sobbed an elderly lady as
she embraced Hajer Darwish, a young mother of two sitting in the front
of a pick-up truck driven by her husband. “She’s crying because we’re
leaving and she’s staying,” explained Darwish, smiling.
“We’re so happy to go back to our country. I haven’t slept all night.”
Darwish’s sons, who were born in Lebanon, will be seeing their parents’ country for the first time. They have high hopes.
“In Syria, there are sheep, cows, chickens, swimming pools and water,”
lists one of them. Water and electricity cuts are common in the camps
surrounding Arsal, where living conditions are rudimentary.
'Look at those leaving: they’re mostly women, children or men who are too old for the army'- Oum Hussein, refugee
Standing on her balcony to watch the trucks waiting to leave, one Lebanese woman seemed relieved.
“A few hundred people is not many, but it still means fewer refugees in Arsal."
The town has suffered from severe spillover from the Syrian war. The departure has been months in the making.
“Following a reconciliation deal, two traders from the town of Fleeta
living in Arsal started circulating lists of names of refugees who were
interested in returning to the Qalamoun area,” explained Mireille
Girard, the UNHCR representative in Lebanon, in an interview mid-June.
The names were handed over to the Lebanese General Security, a branch of
the intelligence services, who sent them to Damascus for approval. Over
3,000 people registered, but only 360 left yesterday, according to a
Lebanese army colonel who was coordinating their departure on the
ground. Later in the day, General Security announced that actually only
294 people made the trip back to Syria.
The Lebanese army check the names of Syrians who were approved by Damascus to return to Syria (MEE/Sunniva Rose)
In many cases, the only person to be approved in the family was female.
As a result, the entire family stayed in Lebanon. Hayla Jassatir, a
29-year-old mother of six, had packed her truck together with her
husband, Muhammad Kanaan, hoping that he would be able to leave with
her. But it was not to be.
“Who will drive us to Fleeta if he can’t come?” she complained. Like a
dozen other people in the same situation, Jassatir kept asking a
harassed-looking young man carrying a long list of names to double check
whether her husband’s name might be on it.
A widow from Yabroud, who wished to remain anonymous, was caught in a
similar bind. “I have been approved, but not my daughter and her
husband,” she explained. “I thank Lebanon for hosting us, but I cannot
be happy until I go home. The first thing I want to do is paint and fix
the house."
Those watching their relatives leaving were uncertain whether they would
be following them soon. Samira Boutara’s father and his pregnant second
wife left yesterday for Jrajeer to scout the town.
“We haven’t registered yet. We don’t know if it’s safe enough back home,” said Boutara.
“We’ll just go back to our nylon bag now," she laughed, referring to her tent in one of Arsal’s camps.
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“We hate the camp here," one of her sisters chimed in, more seriously.
“We might be too poor to rebuild our houses in Syria, but we’re happy to just cover the holes and windows and live like that.”
Overall, the Syrians who left yesterday represented only a small portion
of the refugees in Arsal, and their number is insignificant when
compared with the number of Syrians in Lebanon - over one million. The
UNHCR identified 11,000 spontaneous departures last year.
Returnees must meet several conditions. First, cooperate fully with the
Syrian authorities, which means openly stating their support for Bashar
al-Assad. Second, they must be willing to send the young men of the
family to the army, as military service is obligatory for men aged
between 18 and 42.
“Look at those leaving: they’re mostly women, children or men who are
too old for the army,” observed Oum Hussein, who stood by the side of
the road waving goodbye to a friend leaving for Fleeta.
She is too afraid to return to Syria. Her family is strongly associated
with the opposition: her husband died in anti-government demonstrations
back in 2011, and her son deserted the Syrian army before being killed.
She now lives in Arsal with three of her children. Only one member of
her extended family has dared register his name to return to Syria.
“It’s only because he thinks that he might lose his house in Damascus.
He has another house in Yabroud but he’s less worried about it. The
regime is mostly interested in demographic change around the capital,”
says Oum Hussein.
Land seizures
A law issued in April allows the Syrian government to seize land for
developments. Syrians have a year to present their deeds to local
council offices in the country. By “demographic change”, Oum Hussein was
referring to a common fear: that Assad is trying to destroy former
opposition bastions and replace them with pro-government populations.
However, many Syrian men who volunteered to return home from Arsal
argued that they were not worried at the prospect of having to join the
army. “I’ll go back to my country and fight armed groups,” claimed
28-year old Mohammad Ramadan, sitting in his tent in Arsal last week.
“But first, I’ll be allowed a break of six months to a year,” he added.
His family has heard that Syrian men who returned last summer to the
small town of Assal al-Ward, near the Lebanese border, still haven’t
been summoned by the army.
Ramadan has registered to leave but has not been approved yet.
People ready to leave Arsal on their tractor (MEE/Sunniva Rose)
Lebanon has every interest in making sure that voluntary departures such
as the one that took place in Arsal run smoothly. The foreign
minister’s chief of cabinet, Hadi Hachem, told Reuters this week that
“for us, this group of people will be like a pilot project” to encourage
other Syrians to go home.
Lebanese President Michel Aoun frequently repeats that Syrians should
return to their country irrespective of progress on a political solution
there.
His son-in-law, caretaker foreign minister Gebran Bassil, is at war with
the UNHCR since he froze the renewal of visas for foreign UNHCR staff
in Lebanon earlier this month. The minister accuses the UN – and the
rest of the international community – of discouraging Syrian refugees
from returning to their country.
The possibility of a permanent settlement of Syrian refugees in Lebanon
is a highly sensitive topic in Lebanon and brings back memories from the
civil war, which was in part triggered by the presence of Palestinian
refugees.
Mireille Girard, UNHCR representative in Lebanon, flatly denies this
claim. “We are not opposed to the return of those who want to,” she
said.
The organisation did not participate in the coordination of the
refugees’ return, as it does not deem Syria safe enough. But it
accompanies refugees through the final administrative steps that are
necessary before leaving Lebanon.
“They give us their address in Syria and then, if we get the permission
to visit the area, we try to find them again,” adds Girard. In the case
of the town of Assal al-Ward, the UNHCR was allowed to visit the
returnees, but it is still waiting for permission to visit Fleeta and
its surrounding villages.