Arsal Braces for New Flood of Syria Refugees

W460

The Lebanese farming town of Arsal, already inundated with Syrian refugees, is bracing for another influx as the brutal civil war creeps over the horizon just across the border.

The town has long been linked to Syria by well-worn smuggling paths over the mountains, now used by thousands of refugees fleeing the latest offensive by President Bashar Assad's troops.

The latest wave have fled from Qara, a village in Syria's mountainous Qalamoun, a strategic region straddling supply routes between Damascus and the central city of Homs.

Arsal, home to around 35,000 people, is a Sunni community sympathetic to the 32-month-old Syrian uprising, in which an estimated 120,000 people have been killed since March 2011.

But it is situated in a region dominated by Hizbullah, which is fighting alongside Assad's forces in a conflict that threatens to spill into overwhelmed Lebanon.

"We are in solidarity with our neighbors from across the border because we are linked by family and social ties," says municipal councilor Wafiq Khalaf.

As elsewhere in Lebanon, the new arrivals have mainly relied on local families, some of which have squeezed up to four refugee families into their modest homes.

But Khalaf says space is running out, and new arrivals are being squeezed into tents, reception halls and even mosques.

There are no official refugee camps in Lebanon, and scores of families live in tents that will provide little shelter from the winter cold.

Underscoring the strains on the town's resources, a sign posted outside the town hall reads: "Notice to our refugee brothers -- please don't use electricity for heating" and advises them to use just one lightbulb per room.

Khalaf fears that as Syrian troops press into Qalamoun -- which had been largely spared the fighting that has devastated the rest of Syria -- even more Syrians will arrive.

The war has generated the largest refugee crisis in two decades, with millions displaced inside the country and in increasingly unstable neighbors like Iraq and Lebanon, which have both seen sectarian attacks mirroring Syria's violence.

The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees puts the newest arrivals in Arsal at around 6,000, while the municipality estimates the total probably now exceeds the town's population.

Lebanon as a whole, with a population of just over four million, is hosting more than 800,000 Syrian refugees.

"These people had to leave suddenly; they didn't expect it, so they've come without anything," the UNHCR's local representative, Ninette Kelly, said about the new arrivals in Arsal.

"They need immediate support, they need food, they need blankets."

Badawia Abdo, a mother of seven, fled to Arsal after her husband was killed in a rocket attack and her brother died fighting with the rebels.

"My children need clothes," the 37-year-old said, fearful of the oncoming winter.

The tent where they live has only the basics: a carpet, mattresses, blankets and a few cooking implements.

"There is only one shower for every 20 tents," Abdo said. "We wash only once a week."

A woman who identifies herself only as Amal said she, her husband, children and grandchildren, 10 in all, are living under a staircase.

"All I want to do is go home," she said.

For many of the refugees, Arsal is just the latest stop in an odyssey of suffering that shows no sign of ending.

Mohammed al-Jassem and his wife, who have been sleeping in their car for the past five days, fled to Qara when the town of Qusayr fell to Assad's troops in June. Now they are on the move again.

"We left because in all of Qara's families there are people who are wanted. The regime considers us all to be terrorists," he said.

In Lebanon, the refugees live in poverty and foreboding, but they say a worse fate would await them should they go back, a return that appears increasingly distant as the war careens towards its fourth year.

"We are humiliated; we are begging," Abdo says. "But we will not return to Syria until Bashar Assad is gone."

Comments 21
Thumb general_puppet 21 November 2013, 08:35

Mr FlimFlamThower maybe if your heroes the Assad regime & the Ayatollah's militia would stop destroying their homes, imprisoning and killing them in Syria they would stop coming to Lebanon. Why so paranoid, if and when you are banned again just add another notch.

Thumb benzona 21 November 2013, 11:57

You don't know the effect of 2000 (mon oeil) SS Nazi boots can have on people. Especially when they don't shoot to kill, they torture then desecrate people and force other to watch.

Death to Nasrallah !
Death to Bachar !
Death to their allies !

Thumb FlameCatcher 21 November 2013, 12:35

I love your numbers ... they are provided by Hassan Nasrallah ?

I proved to you the other day that the numbers are in fact :

- 15,000 Hezbollah fighters
- 10,000-15,000 foreign fighters other than Hezbollah.

I love how you invent numbers just to defend your cause.

Do they teach you this in Propaganda University or is this dictated to you by your pro-syrian (government), pro-iranian, anti-lebanese, anti-syrian people leaders ?

Thumb FlameCatcher 21 November 2013, 12:40

PS: you forgot to mention Bashar's couple of hundred thousand soldiers, shabiha that Hezbollah is backing and that are butchering their populations and LEGITIMATE opposition who want nothing more than live in FREEDOM !

You also forget how they murder their own soldiers who refused to shoot on civilians ! How can you defend such a regime ?

Thumb thepatriot 21 November 2013, 16:11

400.000 ... only!? That's as much as the entire Egyptian army... the 10th largest in the world LOL

Thumb FlameCatcher 21 November 2013, 16:14

@FT :
1- Calling me M14 once more is wishful thinking. You make me laugh because this makes you either an idiot or an ignorant ! Once again, not all your opponents are M14 Saudi Loving Cannibal Zionists ... it's really getting old

2- Hezbollah has over 40,000 trained and armed soldiers ... according to your FARS agency, they have over 65,000 fighters :) http://www.farsnews.com/newstext.php?nn=13911026001114 I hope they tought your farsi in propaganda 101 :)

3- Syrian Army has about 250,000 - 280,000 soldiers and 300,000 reservists... Not 1M ... come on ... be realistic !

SHOVE IT ALREADY with your propaganda ! Take your bullshit numbers to your ignorant comrades who believe every crap you say !

Thumb cedre 21 November 2013, 16:43

ur figures are even worse than almanar and syrian Tv ones.
Only Thierry Meyssan, the gay freemason working for Iran Tv, beats u at this BS.

Default-user-icon 4Justice (Guest) 21 November 2013, 09:53

Arsal is not Lebanese, the proove is that its inhabitants attacked and killed lebanese army officers and soldiers, they were protecting oulaws and criminals.

So let them handle the burden by themselves and root in hell

Thumb benzona 21 November 2013, 11:58

lol ice-man, I'm rotfl, people around me are wonder what's happening to me.

Thumb EagleDawn 21 November 2013, 12:34

funny))))) so true though. He's earned it.

Thumb thepatriot 21 November 2013, 16:20

The Syrian army is less than 300K FT..."strong"...pff... n'importe quoi!

Thumb geha 21 November 2013, 11:19

God help Lebanon for what is coming.
demography is changing rapidly in Lebanon:
Sunnis who are already a majority by a small margin are being beefed up by doubling their number with disgruntled sunni Syrians.
the Syrian regime is creating an impossible scenario for hizbushaitan in Lebanon by refusing the creation of camps in Syria for the refugees, thus preparing the ground for a major sunni/shia war in Lebanon.

Thumb benzona 21 November 2013, 12:00

then may the christians choose wisely which side they are on. it's a terrible thing to say, but it's so true. there's no such thing as being neutral.... because it can be interpreted as laisser-faire, hence being accomplice of one side.

Thumb geha 21 November 2013, 12:29

you are so blind ft. by refusing to install camps for refugees in Syria, the Syrian regime is the one pushing for this demographic change.
furthermore these Syrians have many reasons to seek revenge from hizbushaitan and the shia, and the fpm alliance with hizbushaitan will not hold when hostilities will start.
benzona is correct: shia cannot prevail in Lebanon.

Thumb FlameCatcher 21 November 2013, 13:59

Tell me how your unHOLLY alliance has averted christian-christian strife ?

You cannot put "Hezbollah" and "Benefit" in the same sentence. There is no possible benefit that comes out of Hezbollah.

And regarding your US / GCC / KSA ... even if true, don't ignore Iran's plans to create a "Shiite" region spanning accross Iran, Irak, Syria and Lebanon... this is their masterplan but you're too blind to see it or too biased to admit it !

Default-user-icon hanoun (Guest) 21 November 2013, 11:47

qui seme le vent recolte la tempete

Default-user-icon Just a thought (Guest) 21 November 2013, 11:58

Shameful that richies like miqati, hariri, salam don't help these refugees by at least making sure everyone has a tent, clothes, shower, and 3 meals a day. Or the saudi and khaleeji richies who dont mind paying 300000000 trillion dollars on golden cars, european paintings, diamond smartphones, luxury homes that they never even go to, 3000 servants and other nonsence. It is so easy for them to provide actual help, they could be the good guys yet they chose to be the bad guys alongside the butcher bashar and his hezb el shaytan. Speninding all that money to pay for irresponsible undisciplined fighters who recently were drug addicts, strip club attendes and other criminals to create chaos instead of sending in actual soldiers to end the opression and secure a peaceful syria with every religion and region given it's rights and protection. Whoever thinks gulf leaders care about islam and muslims is misstaken. They are pawns used to make things better for the bigger satan israel.

Thumb benzona 21 November 2013, 12:29

Just a thought should not be judgemental. "Whoever thinks gulf leaders care about islam and muslims is misstaken"; sure there is some truth in this, but you generalize therefor you lost credibility. dommage! And calling Israel Satan is quite weird especially when Satan worshippers living underground are somewhere in Dahye.

Thumb FlameCatcher 21 November 2013, 14:18

@phoenix, it's because the Syrian refugees are fleeing the Syrian regime and their terrorist mercenaries. Otherwise, they would remain in Syria given most cities are "liberated" by Bashar's forces ...

Some idiots around here still insist on saying the million or so refugees in Lebanon are fleeing "takfiris" and such ... as I said, they are idiots !

I actually dare them to go visit a Syrian camp and talk to a few refugees ... or talk to the tens of thousands of syrians in Beirut ... just ask them who they are fleeing ! It's a simple task ... and you will get a straight answer.

But Hezbollah supporters do not even care about the Syrian people ...

Thumb chrisrushlau 21 November 2013, 16:14

World powers must be deeply satisfied to see the unhappiness their aggression are bringing to the region. But this is all Lebanon's fault: if it had a one-person:one-vote constitution, none of this would be happening.

Thumb cedre 21 November 2013, 16:44

u're right dissociation policy should be applied only to sunnis...