15 Syrian Refugees in Lebanon Test Positive for COVID-19

W460

At least 15 Syrian refugees living in the same building in east Lebanon have tested positive for COVID-19, the United Nations said Wednesday, ahead of plans to screen thousands of refugees.

"There are 15 confirmed cases of COVID-19 among Syrian refugees in Majdal Anjar," a town in the Bekaa Valley, said Lisa Abou Khaled of UNHCR, the U.N.'s refugee agency.

Lebanon has officially recorded 1,161 novel coronavirus cases, including 26 deaths.

Before the outbreak in Majdal Anjar, only one other Syrian refugee in Lebanon had tested positive for COVID-19, UNHCR says.

Among Lebanon's Palestinian refugee population, at least six cases have been detected in a camp in the Bekaa Valley.

Although the coronavirus outbreak among Lebanon's refugee population remains limited, aid groups are concerned that overcrowded settlements could make refugees especially vulnerable to the virus.

The new COVID-19 cases in Majdal Anjar are now in self-isolation, receiving food and disinfection kits from UNHCR, Abou Khaled said.

The spokesperson said UNHCR and Lebanon's health ministry have "initiated a testing campaign in informal settlements and collective shelters, focusing on areas with high concentration of refugees."

"Thousands of refugees will be included in the testing campaign... over the next weeks," she added.

UNHCR covers the cost of screening, medical treatment and hospitalization for refugees infected with the coronavirus.

Lebanon, a small country of 4.5 million people, says it hosts 1.5 million Syrians, including nearly a million refugees registered with the United Nations.

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