Arab News

Crimes by Syrians prompt calls for their early repatriati­on from Lebanon

Latest incident was the killing of an official in the Lebanese Forces Party, Pascal Sleiman

- Najia Houssari Beirut

The UN High Commission­er for Refugees reiterated on Tuesday “the right of Syrian refugees in Lebanon to return freely to their homeland whenever they choose to do so.”

It came as the campaign against the continued presence of Syrian refugees in Lebanon intensifie­d against the backdrop of crimes committed by Syrians in recent weeks.

The latest incident was the killing of an official in the Lebanese Forces Party, Pascal Sleiman, last week after his car was stolen and his body taken to the Lebanese-Syrian border.

It was preceded a few days earlier by another crime committed in the Achrafieh area in Beirut against a husband and wife by their Syrian maid and other Syrians in and intended robbery. The husband died following the incident and his wife seriously injured.

On Tuesday morning news broke of the death of Lebanese Yasser Al-Kokash in the town of Al-Azzounieh in Aley district at the hands of Syrian citizens after they tied him up and stole the contents of his apartment.

Syrian refugees started coming to Lebanon in 2011. The number of refugees registered with the UNHCR has decreased to less than 1 million people after some returned to their country. However, after the UNHCR stopped registerin­g Syrian refugees in 2015, the rate of illegal crossings from Syria to Lebanon increased. Lebanon estimates the number of Syrian refugees on its territory to exceeds 2 million people.

Caretaker Minister of Interior Bassam Al-Mawlawi estimated the percentage of Syrian detainees and convicts in Lebanese prisons to be about 35 percent of the total prison population.

The Lebanese General Security has organized voluntary repatriati­on trips for Syrian refugees, but only a few thousand refugees returned, as the Syrian regime decides who can return according to lists of names provided by the Lebanese General Security to the relevant Syrian authoritie­s.

In a statement, UNHCR spokeswoma­n Dalal Harb said: “We support and respect the humanitari­an right of refugees to return freely and voluntaril­y to their home country, whenever they choose to do so, in accordance with internatio­nal principles and non-refoulemen­t.”

Harb stressed that “most Syrian refugees express their desire to return to Syria, but their decision is based on several factors, including safety, security, housing, access to basic services, and securing livelihood­s.”

He added the UNHCR “will continue to cooperate with the General Directorat­e of General Security, which facilitate­s the repatriati­on of the refugees who want to return to Syria by registerin­g their names.”

Ahead of the Brussels Conference on Refugees on April 30, Lebanon has urged donors to secure assistance to cover the cost of the Syrian presence in the country.

Minister of Informatio­n Ziad Makary said on Tuesday: “The illegal infiltrati­on of Syrian refugees through the sea from Lebanon into Cyprus has caused a diplomatic crisis.

“The crimes that have occurred made us focus more on this existentia­l problem for Lebanon. The solution is for them to either return to Syria or go to a third country.” Makary also went over the decisions taken, such as “the circular aiming to close all the unauthoriz­ed institutio­ns owned by Syrians.” He considered that “convoys of return require a political solution with Syria.”

A plan proposed by the ministers of labor and social affairs, the Maronite League, and the General Directorat­e of General Security was also addressed, which aims to repatriate Syrians, calls for the establishm­ent of a National Emergency Authority headed by the prime minister.

It will be in charge of communicat­ing with UNHCR officials in order to assist the state in classifyin­g Syrians into three categories.

The first includes Syrians registered with the UNHCR as refugees and who can return to safe areas of their country. The second category includes Syrians who are registered with the UNHCR as refugees and work in Lebanon, while the third includes those who are registered with the UNHCR as refugees and want to travel to a third country.

 ?? AFP ?? Lebanese Interior Minister Bassam Al-Mawlawi speaks during a press conference about the killing of Pascal Suleiman which shook the country, at the Ministry of Interior in Beirut.
AFP Lebanese Interior Minister Bassam Al-Mawlawi speaks during a press conference about the killing of Pascal Suleiman which shook the country, at the Ministry of Interior in Beirut.

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