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Palestinian Refugees from Syria Barred
from Entering Lebanon Puts them at Grave Risk
Says Human
Rights Watch
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May 12, 2014
Lebanon:
Palestinians Barred, Sent to Syria Reverse Blanket Rejection
of Refugees
The Lebanese government forcibly returned about
three dozen Palestinians to
Syria on May 4, 2014, putting them at grave risk, Human Rights Watch
said today. On the same day, the government also arbitrarily denied entry to
Palestinians crossing over the land border from Syria.
The Lebanese
government should urgently rescind its decision to bar Palestinians from
Syria from entering
Lebanon, Human Rights Watch said. Lebanon is turning people back without
adequately considering the dangers they face. Such a policy violates the
international law principle of nonrefoulement, which forbids governments
from returning refugees and asylum seekers to places where their lives or
freedom would be threatened.
“The Lebanese government is bearing an
incomparable burden with the Syrian refugees crossing its borders, but
blocking Palestinians from Syria is mishandling the situation,” said
Joe Stork, deputy Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights
Watch. “Palestinians are among the most vulnerable people in the Syria
conflict, and like Syrian nationals are at risk of both generalized violence
and targeted attacks.”
Human Rights Watch spoke by phone on May 5 to
two men who were part of a group of about three dozen people deported by
Lebanese General Security on May 4. They and a third person had remained in
the strip of territory between the Lebanese and Syrian border checkpoints at
the Masnaa crossing for fear of what would happen to them if they reentered
Syria. The rest of the group reentered Syria, where their fate is unknown.
The decision to deport the men followed their arrest at the Beirut
airport on May 3 for allegedly attempting to leave the country using
fraudulent visas. On May 3, Lebanon’s General Security issued a statement
indicating that 49 Syrians and Palestinians from Syria had been stopped at
the airport that day for using forged documents and that legal proceedings
would be initiated against them.
Salam (names have been changed for
their protection), a 26-year-old Palestinian who had been living in the
Yarmouk refugee camp in Damascus, said he left Syria in December 2012. He
told Human Rights Watch that Beirut airport officials accused him of having
a fake Libyan visa in his passport and then transferred him to the Masnaa
border crossing without explanation. He said the authorities had deported
him even though he told General Security officials that he feared he would
be detained if he was returned to Syria. He said that he was registered as a
refugee with UNRWA, the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees, both
in Syria and after arriving in Lebanon. He said: On May 3, I went to the
Beirut airport to travel to Libya…General Security said the visa is fake…and
detained me at the airport for 26 hours with 40 other Syrians. They
transferred us to the Masnaa border without explaining anything…They told us
that we will be deported. They did not give us an option to leave, to go to
another country. I spoke with the head of General Security...I told him I
can’t go back to Syria because I will be detained for skipping my mandatory
army service... The [General Security] general said that he can’t do
anything…Now I am staying here [in between the border check points] until a
country agrees to take me in. I prefer to wait than to get arrested in
Syria.
A 21-year-old Palestinian refugee from the Yarmouk camp, who was deported
with his brother, told Human Rights Watch that he also was stopped at the
Beirut airport while attempting to travel to Libya and accused of having a
forged visa. He too was registered with UNRWA in Syria and in Lebanon, where
he has been living for the past year-and-a-half. He said that they were
arrested with approximately 45 others, the majority of them Palestinians. He
said he was afraid to enter Syria because he too had fled his military
service.
“They didn’t explain anything to us – why they were
detaining us and where they were taking us,” he said. “They didn’t give us
any other option other than returning to Syria. We had women and children
with us and one was pregnant.”
Before the March 2011 uprising began,
Syria was home to approximately 500,000 Palestinian refugees, some of whom
were born and raised in the country. Palestinians from Syria, like Syrians
there, have suffered greatly as a result of generalized violence and
unlawful attacks by both government forces and non-state armed groups.
Palestinian refugee camps, including in Aleppo, Daraa, and the Yarmouk camp
in south Damascus, have come under attack and siege, resulting in numerous
civilian fatalities and injuries.
The Yarmouk camp, home to the
largest Palestinian community in the country before the start of the
conflict, was besieged by government forces in December 2012,
resulting in widespread malnutrition and in some cases death from
starvation. While some humanitarian relief has entered Yarmouk since then,
residents who remain there are denied access to life-saving medical
assistance and adequate food supplies. Half of the Palestinians who lived in
Syria when the conflict began have been displaced as a result of the
conflict, the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
reported. Government forces have also arbitrarily detained and tortured
Palestinians.
Since the conflict began, approximately 60,000
Palestinians from Syria have registered in Lebanon with UNRWA.
On
November 25, 2013, Human Rights Watch
wrote to the Lebanese minister of interior to raise concerns about “an
apparent change in practice, and perhaps in policy, that seems to have begun
in early August 2013 whereby Palestinians generally are denied entry from
Syria.” At that time, seven Palestinians from Syria who were stranded at the
Masnaa crossing told Human Rights Watch that they were being denied entry.
Some of the Palestinians stranded at the border said they had previously
crossed into Lebanon without any problem, and they said that when they asked
for an explanation, General Security officials at the border were either not
forthcoming or became hostile or threatened to respond with a one-year or
one-month bar on entry. The Ministry of Interior did not respond to the
letter.
Human Rights Watch has also documented the Jordanian
government’s policy of pushing back Palestinian refugees from Syria trying
to enter Jordan from Syria at the border, without considering their claims
for asylum in Jordan. In violation of its international legal obligations,
Jordan banned entry to all Palestinians from Syria in October 2012,
denying refuge to those trying to flee Syria and rendering the presence
of those already in the kingdom illegal, thereby increasing their
vulnerability to exploitation, arrest, and deportation. According to the
March 2014 Syria Needs Analysis Project
report, Jordanian authorities have forcibly returned over 100
Palestinians to Syria, including deportations of women, children, and
injured individuals. In one case, a Palestinian was arrested in late 2012 at
his home in Syria 20 days after he was
forcibly returned from Jordan, and his body was later dumped on the
street in front of his father’s house, showing bullet wounds and signs of
torture, according to informed sources who asked not to be named.
“Concerned governments should generously assist neighboring countries,
including Lebanon, so that they can meet the needs of refugees and asylum
seekers from Syria,” Stork said.
***
For more Human Rights Watch reporting on Lebanon, please
visit:
http://www.hrw.org/middle-eastn-africa/lebanon
For more
information, please contact:
In Beirut, Lama Fakih (English, Arabic): +961-3-900-105 (mobile); or
fakihl@hrw.org. Follow on Twitter @lamamfakih
In Washington, DC, Joe Stork (English): +1-202-299-4925 (mobile); or
storkj@hrw.org In Washington DC, Bill
Frelick (English): +1-240-593-1747; or
bill.frelick@hrw.org. Follow on Twitter @BillFrelick
In Amman, Adam Coogle (English, Arabic): +962-797-214-069 (mobile); or
cooglea@hrw.org. Follow on Twitter @cooglea
In Cairo, Tamara Alrifai (English, Arabic, French, Spanish):
+20-122-751-2450 (mobile); or
alrifat@hrw.org. Follow on Twitter @TamaraAlrifai
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