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Pushed back into the fire

Syrian refugees living outside camps in Jordan are among the most vulnerable but they receive the least assistance, leaving them unable to survive.

- by PETER BEAUMONT

THE Bedouin town of Mafraq isonly a short drive from the gates of the Zaatari refugee camp in Jordan. It hosts about 100,000 refugees, who outnumber the town’s Jordanian citizens and the population of Zaatari.

Living in rented rooms, converted garages, workshops, some in structures built on the roofs of local houses, the Syrian refugees living outside campsin Jordan are among the most vulnerable.

Supported by many of the same internatio­nal agencies and funded in part, like the camps, by British aid money, Mafraq’s refugees symbolise not the success of the internatio­nal aid effort but its failure – a failure that is increasing­ly driving people towards Europe or in desperatio­n back into Syria’s war zones.

Impoverish­ed and burdened with debt, many in Mafraq saw their food rations reduced in August asthe cash- strapped World Food Programme ( WFP) reduced the number of Syrian refugees receiving its food vouchers in Middle Eastern host countries by a third, leaving 229,000 in Jordan without food aid asof September.

The reality, as senior aid officials concede, is that despite the largesse of donor countries, including £ 1bil ( RM6.7bil) contribute­d by the UK, the Syrian aid effort faced crises on various fronts, including funding and the exasperati­on of those affected who see no end in sight to the Syrian conflict.

Mahmoud Krouma is planning to leave for Europe. He will leave his family behind for now, including his brother-in- law, Mazin, 32, who has Down syndrome. Originally from Homs, one of Mahmoud’s eyes was damaged in an explosion. Most of Mazin’s family were killed in a missile strike.

“We’ve been here two years this month,” Mahmoud says. His wife Wafa says their WFP food ration was cut last month. Like many, they do not know if they will get any assistance next time the vouchers are issued. “We had a family meeting after the ration was cut,” says Mahmoud as images of the war and Europe’s refugee crisis play out on the television behind him.

“I have a passport so I can fly to Turkey. We collected the money for the flight to Istanbul and US$ 1,000 for the people smugglers in Izmir.” He will travel with seven neighbours all following the same route, first aiming for Greece and then for Germany or Sweden. “We prayed and prayed together,” says Wafa. “It seemed like the only hope.”

Mahmoud isnot alone in contemplat­ing the journey. In the streets of Mafraq, many families had already left. Others tell of neighbours who have gone or who are planning to go.

In Mahmoud’s apartment block, only two of 12 families remain. Some have gone to Turkey, but others– at their wits’ end – have returned to Syria, preferring to risk the war than continue struggling to survive in Jordan where they cannot work, aid is being slashed and family debt mounts inexorably.

Both Syrians and aid officials say the sense of mounting despair is captured in various indicators in the camps and among Jordan’s urban refugees in places such as Mafraq.

On one day last week, almost 200 refugees took the bus that goes daily from Zaatari back to the Syrian border to return to the conflict zone. Anecdotal evidence suggests a small number will try the perilous overland route across the many fronts to reach Turkey. Most simply cannot see a future in Jordan, where 86% of refugees receive less than 68 dinars( RM400) a month, set by the Jordanian government asthe country’s poverty level.

According to senior UN officials, child marriages are rising as families seek to find somewhere their daughters will be provided for. Those who can, sell their assets, including property and land in Syria.

The increasing­ly grim and febrile mood hasbeen made worse by media imagesof those who have made it to Europe and a lively rumour mill.

Andrew Harper, the UN refugee agency’s head in Jordan, paints a bleak picture of the effort to house refugees in the country, which had seen initial successes. “We have seen the number of Syrians wanting to return rising from 60 a day to 120 a day in August to 190 on one day last week. It is too early to say whether it isa trend, but it is going upwards,” he says.

“We should be providing support for people where they are safe, not creating the circumstan­cesthat pushes them back into the war zone.”

The agency hasalso seen a gradual increase in those trying to reach Turkey, Harper says. “These are refugees who lost almost everything in the conflict. Now after several years for most, they have sold off most of their remaining assets. By increment sit is becoming increasing­ly difficult for them to survive.

“People cannot work legally, and the lack of livelihood­s means the situation here isnot sustainabl­e. Europe is now confrontin­g the consequenc­es of its policies here.”

Harper’s solution for Jordan is simple – to fund projects that provide work for refugees in Jordan and benefit the developmen­t of a host country that has grown increasing­ly weary of the refugees that it took in.

Ayman Al Awad, 37, lives with his family in a ramshackle room built on a roof for which he pays100 dinars( RM595) a month. A refugee from Deraa, he would migrate if he could, but will only do so if it is legal. Without help to pay his rent, he hasbeen selling his food vouchers at a loss to cover the cost. Since the cut in the WFP’s food vouchers, however, he no longer has enough to cover the payments.

“We steal bread and live on bruised vegetables that we can find,” he says. “We survive on scraps. I used to own a supermarke­t. I had a small farm and a car. All I need is100 dinars a month. If I was allowed, I would sell tomatoes in the street to make ends meet, but then I would be arrested.”

Ayman says there is nothing left for him in Syria, but feel she may have to return. “I’ve talked to the family. We will give it five or six more months,” he says. “If things don’t get better we will have to return. We have no choice. We are being pushed back into the fire.” – Guardian News Service

 ??  ?? A sense of mounting despair looms over the Zaatari refugee camp in mafraq, Jordan. — Ap
A sense of mounting despair looms over the Zaatari refugee camp in mafraq, Jordan. — Ap

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