Lebanon Pleads for Help in Dealing with Refugees

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Lebanon pleaded Monday for more international support to tackle the huge influx of refugees from the war-ravaged country, warning the burden could destabilize the whole region.

"We are calling on the international community to bear its responsibility," caretaker Minister of Social Affairs Wael Abou Faour told diplomats gathered in Geneva, slamming the lack of assistance from outside the region.

He was speaking alongside the foreign ministers of Jordan, Turkey and Iraq at a special meeting of the U.N. refugee agency focused on how to better distribute the burden of the swelling Syria conflict, which since March 2011 has killed over 100,000 people and forced more than 2.1 million to flee into neighboring countries.

"The impact of the refugee influx on the societies, economies and communities of the host countries is immense," warned U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres. He demanded that the global community help Syria's overstretched neighbors, which are already "going through huge demographic changes following the refugee influx, unsettling their social and economic fabric."

The countries in the region may need direct budget support, as well as long-term development investment, Guterres said, stressing also that countries outside the region needed to take in some of the refugees.

"I call on all countries, particularly in Europe and the extended Middle East, to allow Syrians to access asylum and enjoy quality protection," he said.

If the situation in Syria deteriorates drastically, he warned, "the international community may also have to consider the humanitarian emergency evacuation of Syrian refugees to locations outside the region to help ease the pressure on neighboring countries."

EU Humanitarian Aid Commissioner Kristalina Georgieva, who also spoke at the conference, stressed the "very severe risk of destabilization."

"We need to keep our borders open," she said.

Pressure on Syria's neighbors has already become unbearable, their representatives said Monday.

Lebanon counted by Monday evening some 769,000 Syrians registered or in the process of registering as refugees, Abou Faour told reporters, pointing out that on Monday morning the number had been 763,000.

Including all the unregistered Syrians, the actual number is around 1.3 million, he said, or about 30 percent of the Lebanese population.

Despite the massive influx and Lebanon's many appeals for international help, "nothing of significance has materialized so far. Not one hospital. Not one school," Abou Faour said.

"We are more than disappointed. We are frustrated. It has been more than two years of advice, of lessons, of promises and nothing," he said, warning that the "huge pressure" on his already fragile country's infrastructure, schools, health system and services was creating "antagonistic trends against Syrian refugees" and calls from some to close the borders.

While insisting Beirut would keep the borders open to anyone truly in need of humanitarian assistance, Abou Faour acknowledged that some screening had begun to reduce the numbers of people crossing into the country.

If the international community does not step up and do more, it risks "losing a major ally in Lebanon," he said, warning "the price of shouldering the Syrian crisis is proving too much to bear."

Jordan meanwhile is now home to over 522,000 Syrian registered refugees, representing around 10 percent of the population, and the overflowing al-Zaatari camp that opened just 14 months ago has swelled to become the country's fourth largest city.

Jordanian Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh echoed the sentiment of fellow diplomats in urging donor countries to provide much-needed funds.

"The international community needs to replace words with deeds," said Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, whose country has already spent $2.0 billion to support its nearly 500,000 Syrian refugees -- less than 10 percent of which came from international assistance.

Participants in Monday's conference also pressed for a UN Security Council resolution focused on access for humanitarian workers to Syria.

"We need to do more to ensure our aid moves across battle lines and across borders and reaches the most conflict-affected areas and the most vulnerable populations," said US Deputy Secretary of State William Burns.

"It is high time for the Security Council to speak with one voice to demand unfettered humanitarian access," he told the assembly.

Comments 7
Thumb benzona over 10 years

They're sectarian to the bone, they don't help no shia/alawites. They're so sick!

Thumb benzona over 10 years

Hezb is killing its own community....They're so dumb. Arm 1.3 million Syrians, 500.000 Palestinians and the shias end up living with the fish in the Mediterranean.

Missing beirutbastard00 over 10 years

Omg 30%???

Missing -karim_m1- over 10 years

Where is the kingdom of terrorism and Qatar? They are responsible for arming and financing FSA-Al Qaeda and therefore directly responsible for the plight of the refugees.

Thumb -.-.wolf-.-. over 10 years

International community ? Especially the EU. ! Open up your Borders! ?
Why ?
What is wrong with the Property of the Syrians called the Golan Heights ?
You bloody Zionists !
Give back what is rightfully theirs !
This is a Major Humanitarian Crisis !
Open up the Golan Heights for safe haven you Bastards !
OPEN UP THE GOLAN HEIGHTS YOU BASTARDS !
It is written in the Old Scriptures , " They shall not Steal "
It IS part of the TEN COMMANDMENTS !
No wonder Mosses broke the Stone Tablets !
You Jews are All Cursed !
Signed Wolf !!!!!......!!!!!.......!!!!!!.......

Default-user-icon wolfizcorrectx (Guest) over 10 years

this!

Golan heights are syrian, it's 1200km, some 15 percent of lebanon's population can fit there, meaning 500,000

PUT THE REFUGEES THERE instead of allowing them to roam freely, something that's rarely allowed in other countries hosting refugees

shou hayda wleh

Default-user-icon lol@benzona (Guest) over 10 years

akbar wahad sectarian enta ya blind benzosannifirst ya ignorant caveman

i bet the europeans look down on you, unless you're in one of the muslim invaded ones