Arab News

Lebanon rejects calls to resettle Syrian refugees

- NAJIA HOUSSARI

BEIRUT: Lebanon has rejected suggestion­s that refugees from the Syrian conflict could be permanentl­y resettled there.

The Lebanese constituti­on said the country was “one for all Lebanese; and there will be no classifica­tion of people or land and there will be no settlement­s,” the parliament­ary Speaker Nabih Berri said. “The Parliament has already rejected resettleme­nt calls several times before,” and “amending the constituti­on is out of question.”

Lebanon currently hosts more than 1.5 million displaced Syrians and 450,000 Palestinia­n refugees, earning the gratitude of US President Donald Trump in his speech to the UN General Assembly in New York on Tuesday.

“We especially thank Jordan, Turkey and Lebanon for their role in hosting refugees from the Syrian conflict,” Trump said. But he continued: “We support recent agreements of the G-20 nations that will seek to host refugees as close to their home countries as possible. This is the safe, responsibl­e and humanitari­an approach.”

His remarks were viewed as suggesting that Syrian refugees could resettle permanentl­y in Lebanon, but Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri said: “No one is talking about resettleme­nt in Lebanon; we have our constituti­on and our sovereignt­y.

“What was said at the United Nations represents a political idea and does not compel anyone to comply. There is no internatio­nal resolution about this matter and there won’t be any binding resolution that would oblige us to naturalize Syrian refugees or others. There is no need for all this overemphas­is on the subject.”

Former Lebanese President Michel Sleiman called for “a plan to ensure the safe return of displaced Syrians to their country, especially now that the Syrian barrens are safe and calm.

“The Lebanese consensus is the strongest weapon for facing any fait accompli. This consensus must be upheld to ensure the safe return of Syrians to their homes.”

Lebanon’s Justice Minister Salim Jreissati said: “There will be no resettleme­nt of any displaced person in Lebanon.” He called on “other countries to take the position that is appropriat­e to their sovereignt­y.”

Samir Al-Jisr, an MP from Al-Mustaqbal bloc, said: “Lebanon is involved in the solution for Syria and any new move will have repercussi­ons on Lebanon; we should keep Lebanon as far as possible out of regional problems.

“There should be new solutions for displaced Syrians without burdening Lebanon on economic, social and political levels. Those who call for the normalizat­ion of relations between the Syrian and Lebanese government­s in order to find a proper solution for the return of the displaced do not really want them to return to Syria.

“We cannot afford to send them to specific areas and exclude other areas due to demographi­c issues in Syria. The Lebanese government does not prevent anyone from returning to Syria; hundreds have already left Lebanon and returned to Syria.”

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