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 Palestinian Refugees from Syria: Lost and 
	  Betrayed  By Ramzy Baroud Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, September 8, 2012 
 The official position of Arab nations is unambiguous: solidarity 
	with Palestine is paramount. But facts on the ground point to a disturbingly 
	different reality, one in which Palestinians are mistreated beyond any 
	rational justification in various Arab countries. The worst-fated among them 
	are stateless refugees, who have for decades been granted only precarious 
	legal status. In times of crisis thee refugees have repeatedly found 
	themselves in a state of legal and political limbo.
 
 At the recent 
	Non-Aligned Movement summit held in Tehran, Arab leaders spoke with the same 
	ardent passion about justice for the Palestinians. One Arab Emir warned that 
	“preoccupation with issues of the Arab Spring…should not distract us from 
	the Arab central cause of Palestine.” He labored to count all Israeli 
	violations of Palestinian rights, as heads of states nodded in agreement. 
	Absent from the speech, however, was any reference to the ongoing suffering 
	of Palestinian refugees in Arab countries, where, arguably, Israel has no 
	sway.
 
 While there is no question that displaced Syrian refugees are 
	going through a truly horrific experience during the civil war, the fate of 
	Palestinian refugees is markedly worse. This is because Palestinians do not 
	have the basic rights that passport-holding Syrian citizens do. ‘Stuck’, 
	‘stranded’ and ‘imprisoned’ are only some of the terms used to describe the 
	state of Palestinian refugees, ill-treated and subjugated by none other than 
	their ‘Arab brethren’.
 
 Due to geographic necessity, thousands of 
	Palestinian refugees are escaping the war to nearby borders in both Jordan 
	and Lebanon. The UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) has registered 
	nearly 5,000 fleeing refugees. But the number is likely much higher and will 
	continue to grow as fighting escalates.
 
 There are nearly half a 
	million Palestinian refugees in Syria. Despite all attempts at sparing them 
	the bloody outcomes of the conflict, they have still become embroiled in the 
	fight. Regional powers desperate to gain ground in Syria have used their 
	media to exploit the Palestinian issue, knowing well the sentimental value 
	of the Palestinian narrative within the larger Arab discourse. The outcome 
	has been devastating, and many Palestinians have been on the run for nearly 
	a year and a half. Areas with a concentration of Palestinian refugees are no 
	longer neutral territories. Despite pleas and assurances, Palestinian 
	refugees in Syria remain most vulnerable.
 
 In Jordan, hundreds of 
	Palestinian refugees who fled Syria have been crammed into a poorly equipped 
	living facility known as Cyber City, about 90km north of the capital, Amman. 
	Human Rights Watch and other organizations have decried the mistreatment of 
	refugees in Cyber City, reporting forced deportations back to Syria, and the 
	prisoner-like status of those who have remained in Jordan.
 
 In a July 
	4 report, ‘Jordan: Bias at the Syria Border’, Human Rights Watch claimed 
	that those fortunate enough not to be deported are still threatened with 
	deportation. “Since April 2012, the authorities have also arbitrarily 
	detained Palestinians fleeing Syria in a refugee holding center without any 
	options for release other than return to Syria,” stated the report.
 
 One Cyber City resident, Samir, told UN humanitarian news network, IRIN: “It 
	has been quite bad living like a prisoner, especially when you see other 
	people come and go but you are trapped.” According to the report, 
	“Palestinian refugees from Syria feel abandoned” and Palestinian refugees of 
	Cyber City cannot cross over 30 meters from the main building.
 
 Some 
	of the stories imparted by Human Rights Watch are very disturbing to say the 
	least. The organization acknowledges that Jordan has not signed or ratified 
	the 1951 Refugee Convention; it is still required under international human 
	rights law to respect the principle of non-refoulement, which “prohibits 
	countries from sending anyone back to a country where their life or freedom 
	would be threatened.” However, the phenomenon is reportedly recurring in the 
	case of Palestinian refugees.
 
 The situation is Lebanon is equally 
	distressing. Margaret Besheer wrote from Beirut on the double misery of 
	Palestinian refugees fleeing to Lebanon, mostly seeking shelter in the slums 
	of the Shatilla refugee camp. There are 455,000 registered Palestinian 
	refugees in Lebanon who are mostly distributed among 12 refugee camps 
	throughout the country and subsisting in terrible conditions.
 
 Since 
	Lebanon’s Palestinian refugees are already victims of a host of 
	discriminatory laws, one can only imagine the dilemma of newly arriving 
	refugees. Ibtisam’s family shares one room with eight other people in the 
	Shatilla camp. “We are three families staying in one room. What can we do? 
	We escaped from the killing and shelling and now we are living like this.”
 
 Ibtisam can be considered lucky for being allowed entry in the first 
	place. However, unlike other refugees from Syria, Palestinians who are 
	permitted to enter are expected to renew their permit on a monthly basis - 
	at a cost of 50,000 LBP (US$33), an unaffordable feat for families lacking 
	access to proper food or health care.
 
 Many are not even fortunate 
	enough to be able to leave Syria in the first place. According to NGO worker 
	Rawan Nassar, families are forced to deposit large sums of money to obtain 
	permission from authorities. The poor are naturally denied an exit permit, 
	and some families risk their entire lifesavings to escape. Once at the 
	Lebanon border, even more bribing is necessary. “I saw a Palestinian woman 
	at the border, who did not know anyone in Lebanon and she was forced to pay 
	$300 in bribes, $40 for each child,” a Syrian eyewitness told IRIN.
 
 While hostility towards Palestinian refugees is rooted in histories laden 
	with civil wars and conflicts, it is hard to justify the attitude of UN 
	refugee agency, UNHCR, which manifestly differentiates between refugees of 
	other countries and Palestinian refugees. The latter are supposedly the sole 
	responsibility of UNRWA, which has only a tiny relief budget that is unable 
	to keep up with even the most basic demands of those who bother to register.
 
 The crisis ensuing from Palestinian refugees escaping regional conflict 
	is not a new phenomenon, as wars in Iraq, Kuwait and Lebanon have 
	demonstrated in the past. The tragedy is multiplied, however, because no 
	real, long-term solution has been put in place despite the recurring 
	humanitarian catastrophe.
 
 Meanwhile, official speech decrying 
	Israeli crimes continues unabated, with little attention paid to crimes 
	committed elsewhere. This results only in the same disheartening outcome.
 
 One refugee was quoted in UN news as saying: “People come and take 
	pictures and speak with us, but they all leave at the end.” Such is the 
	plight of the Palestinian refugees, sixty-four years after the Nakba.
 
 - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza’s Untold Story (Pluto Press, London.)
 
 
 
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