Qatar Tribune

Lebanon denies forcing Syrians home from Beirut airport

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LEBANESE security forces on Saturday denied accusation­s by rights groups that they had coerced Syrians who had landed at Beirut airport into signing forms to return to their war-torn country.

Human Rights Watch and four other groups Friday accused Lebanon of “summarily deporting” at least 16 Syrians on April 26, after forcing them to sign “voluntary repatriati­on forms”.

Most of them had been sent back to Lebanon after they were barred from entering northern Cyprus via Turkey, quashing their plans to seek asylum, HRW said. But Lebanon’s General Security agency “categorica­lly denies it forced any Syrian to sign any form”, it said in a statement carried by state-run news agency NNA on Saturday.

“Any Syrian who arrives in Lebanon and does not meet entry requiremen­ts, and... wants to go to Syria because they do not wish to remain in their country of residence for a number of reasons, signs a declaratio­n of responsibi­lity for choosing to return voluntaril­y,” it said.

Lebanon hosts almost one million Syrian refugees, a significan­t burden for a country that had 4.5 million inhabitant­s before the Syrian civil war erupted in 2011.

The latest deportees said they were “pressured” by General Security officers at the airport, the rights group said.

Around 30 Syrians have been deported from Beirut airport this year by the General Security agency, the rights group said, citing local refugee organisati­ons.

General Security estimates that over 170,000 Syrians returned home from Lebanon between December 2017 and March 2019.

The conflict has wound down in Syria, after a string of victories by the regime

and its Russian ally since 2015, but the United Nations has stressed all returns should be voluntary. The

rights groups say some 74 percent of Syrians in Lebanon lack legal residency and are at risk of detention.

 ??  ?? (File photo) Lebanon hosts almost one million Syrian refugees, a significan­t burden for a country that had 4.5 million inhabitant­s before the Syrian civil war erupted in 2011.
(File photo) Lebanon hosts almost one million Syrian refugees, a significan­t burden for a country that had 4.5 million inhabitant­s before the Syrian civil war erupted in 2011.

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