Iran Daily

Economic misery engulfs Syrian refugees and their hosts

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Behind the counter of her small convenienc­e store in a rundown neighborho­od of Tripoli, northern Lebanon, 35-year-old Kawkab Mustafa keeps a list of debts owed to her by customers she has allowed to buy goods on credit. In recent months, the list has grown so long she needs four separate notebooks to record all the entries.

Kawkab and her clients, who include both Lebanese locals and Syrian refugees, were already feeling the pain of months of financial turmoil, accompanie­d by political protests, that has hamstrung Lebanon’s economy and pushed as much as 45 percent of the country’s population under the poverty line, according to the World Bank, unhcr.org reported.

The arrival of COVID-19 and restrictio­ns to contain its spread in March have brought further misery, leaving many unable to work and pushing them closer to the brink of destitutio­n.

“The situation is seriously bad here,” Kawkab said. “The neighbors used to be able to pay their debts before, but … they all lost their jobs. We keep thinking it will get better, we didn’t think we would be in this situation. Then corona came and leveled us to the ground.”

Lebanon is currently home to 892,000 registered Syrian refugees, and has the highest per capita population of refugees in the world. According to the most recent assessment by the UN High Commission­er for Refugees (UNHCR) nine out of ten Syrian refugee families in Lebanon were living in debt even before COVID-19 exacerbate­d the situation, with average household debt levels of US$1,115.

For Kawkab, business is so bad that she has fallen behind on rent and is in arrears to her own suppliers, while her husband — a refuse collector — has not been paid for three months. The weekly medication she needs to manage a kidney condition is beyond her reach, putting her health at risk.

“I need an injection every week, but now I can only afford on injection every three weeks,” she explained. “If the situation continues like this, I won’t be able to pay the rent for the shop. I owe three months’ rent on my apartment too.”

Despite these dire circumstan­ces, she continues to help her most vulnerable customers where she can, extending more credit to them and allowing them to pay her back bit-by-bit when they can afford to.

One of her regulars is Syrian refugee Bodour al-qader, who fled to Lebanon from Homs in 2012. With her husband currently unable to find work, they have run up debts of 500,000 Lebanese Pounds ($331) in recent months and fallen behind with the rent.

“Before … my husband might work for a day or two per week and it would help us get by. Now it’s been three or four months that we haven’t paid rent,” Bodour said. “I borrow from Kawkab; she knows me now. When I have money, I will give it to her.”

Kawkab said she believes she is doing the right thing even if it makes her own situation more precarious, and that her generosity would ultimately be repaid by others.

“I have to stand by people, and if there is anything I could do I would do it,” she said. “It’s right this way. In these times no one lends, but in my case, they are kind to me now because I help them, and when I am going through hard times, they stand by me.”

As the economic slump undermines the ability of the Lebanese people to provide for themselves, it also erodes their capacity for even the smallest acts of generosity toward Syrian refugees. Internatio­nal support for Lebanon and humanitari­an agencies is more crucial than ever to help the country and the Syrian refugees it hosts.

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