Number of Syria Refugees in Lebanon Passes 1 Million Mark

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية
  • W460
  • W460

More than a million people fleeing Syria's war have registered as refugees in Lebanon, the U.N. said Thursday, with many now living in misery in a tiny country overstretched by the crisis.

And the number is swelling by the day. At a crowded UNHCR center in Tripoli, Lebanon's second city, hundreds of Syrian refugees were seen on Thursday queuing to register.

The U.N. refugee agency says that every day it registers 2,500 new refugees in Lebanon -- more than one person a minute.

Yehia, an 18-year-old from Homs in Syria, was identified by the UNHCR as the millionth refugee to be registered in the country.

He told Agence France Presse he lives in a garage in Dinniyeh, near Tripoli, with his mother and his two sisters.

His father, a carpenter, was killed by a sniper in 2011, six months after the revolt against President Bashar Assad broke out.

"It is a disaster," said Yehia. "My mother sold all her gold so we could pay the $250 monthly rent. We don't know what will happen to us in the future."

His main wish, he said, was to go back to school to finish his studies, which were interrupted by the war.

"The fact that there were one million Syrians before me who are going hungry, even dying here is very painful," Yehia said sorrowfully.

According to the UNHCR, refugees from Syria, half of them children, now equal a quarter of Lebanon's resident population, warning that most of them live in poverty and depend on aid for survival.

UNHCR representative in Lebanon Ninette Kelly branded the one million figure as "a devastating marker."

"The extent of the human tragedy is not just the resuscitation of numbers, but each one of these numbers represent a human life who, like us, have lives of their own, but who've lost their homes, they've lost their family members, have lost their future," she told reporters.

Kelly said Lebanon has become the country with the highest per capita concentration of refugees worldwide.

Lebanon "is literally staggering under the weight of this problem. Its social services are stressed, health, education, its very fragile infrastructure is also buckling under the pressure."

The massive refugee crisis is compounded by a spillover across the border of the violence that has ravaged Syria for the past three years, with Lebanon experiencing frequent bombings and clashes even as it grapples with political deadlock and an economic downturn.

In a statement, UNHCR chief Antonio Guterres urged increased international action to help Lebanon deal with this "immense" and "staggering" crisis.

Social Affairs Minister Rachid Derbas also appealed for international support saying Lebanon "cannot carry this burden alone".

The strain has been particularly felt across the public sector, with health and education services, as well as electricity, water and sanitation affected.

The humanitarian appeal for Lebanon "is only 14 percent funded," even as the needs of a rapidly growing refugee population become ever more pressing, the UNHCR's Kelly said.

- Girls are married young -

Half the refugees are children, with the vast majority not attending school.

"The number of school-aged children is now over 400,000, eclipsing the number of Lebanese children in public schools. These schools have opened their doors to over 100,000 refugees, yet the ability to accept more is severely limited," said the UNHCR's statement.

Because of the dire economic situation their families endure, many children are now working, "girls can be married young and the prospect of a better future recedes the longer they remain out of school," it added.

Unlike Turkey and Jordan, which are also hosting hundreds of thousands of Syrians, Lebanon has not set up official camps.

Tens of thousands of families live in insalubrious informal settlements dotted around the country, many of them near the restive border with Syria.

Syria's war began as a peaceful uprising demanding political change in Arab Spring-inspired protests, but it morphed into a bloody insurgency after Assad's regime launched a brutal crackdown against dissent.

The conflict has killed more than 150,000 people, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, while half of the population is estimated to have fled their homes.

Comments 11
Missing --karim- 03 April 2014, 08:45

Why cant the Gulf terrorist countries take the refugees? They are the ones financing and arming the FSA-Al Qaeda jihadist rebel terrorists and are therefore responsible for the plight of these refugees. And while they're at it, let them take the Palestinian refugees too, since they also armed and financed the terrorist PLO during the civil war.

Thumb FlameCatcher 03 April 2014, 13:26

Stop it already with your BS propaganda.

Why can't Iran take the refugees ? They are the ones sending their terrorist Hezbollah murder squads to Syria !

The main reason refugees are fleeing is Bashar and Hezbollah.

TO prove my point, I DARE YOU to walk in any refugee camp with a Hezbollah flag. Really, pick your camp, walk in and offer food, support, medicine, whatever.

If you survive, I will start believing you !

Thumb popeye 03 April 2014, 09:37

The terror party and its masters in Iran should pay billions of dollars for these poor refugees since they are the main reason why these people are leaving their country. The terror party should be held accountable for its war crimes against humanity.

Thumb popeye 03 April 2014, 10:46

I await the day when I will read ONE meaningful post, ONE counter argument, ONE credible or mature info from you, Flamethrower..... , but alas!

Thumb EagleDawn 03 April 2014, 12:40

Flemthrower has no arguments to offer, so he resorts to insults.

Thumb FlameCatcher 03 April 2014, 13:26

@Southern : Hezbollah has no right to launch a war operation on a foreign country from Lebanon !

Thumb EagleDawn 03 April 2014, 13:29

"HA was invited by the the legal govt of Syria to help in eradicating those terrorists!"

Great argument and logic indeed!!!! Because according to your sectarian farsi mind, your hizb of blasphemy is an entity above the State and accepts invitations by other countries such as Syria to fight their battles for them. What's the next invitation your hizb is going to get and honor? Venezeula or Bahrain, or Central Africa..... What happened to being the resistance claiming to defend Lebanon and all its sects....LOL. Eradication yes is needed for people of your likes.

Thumb FlameCatcher 03 April 2014, 14:08

Southern : it's clear you need geography lessons. And it has become very clear the Syrian regime is inventing lies about minorities. Check out the scandal about #savekessab and Kardashian and all the lies the regime is inventing about your so called terrorists.

Khallas ba'a ... we simply do not believe you. We see through your lies.

Default-user-icon hanoun (Guest) 03 April 2014, 14:50

since some areas in Syria are war free build them camps inside Syria and add to them the Palestinian refugees under the united nations and or the arab league monitoring and financing
do it soon cause this issue is very serious for all lebaneses

Thumb -phoenix1 03 April 2014, 16:01

Which is the same position I've been taking dear Hanoun, but who will listen, who?

Thumb thelebpatriot111 03 April 2014, 16:58

Gulf state cannibals get fat and the levant gets terrorized. It's time to let go of the notion that the levant is Arab.