UN warns some who fled to Syria risking lives to return to Lebanon

UN warns some who fled to Syria risking lives to return to Lebanon
The UN voiced concern Friday that conditions were so dire in Syria that some Lebanese residents who had fled there seeking refuge from the Israel-Hezbollah war were opting to return to Lebanon. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 22 November 2024

UN warns some who fled to Syria risking lives to return to Lebanon

UN warns some who fled to Syria risking lives to return to Lebanon
  • Gonzalo Vargas Llosa, the UN refugee agency’s representative in Syria, said: “These are very, very small numbers, but for us, even small numbers are worrying signals“
  • The UNHCR estimates that around 560,000 people have fled into Syria from neighboring Lebanon since late September

GENEVA: The UN voiced concern Friday that conditions were so dire in Syria that some Lebanese residents who had fled there seeking refuge from the Israel-Hezbollah war were opting to return to Lebanon.
There are “Lebanese families who are beginning to take the very difficult and potentially life-threatening decision to return to Lebanon,” said Gonzalo Vargas Llosa, the United Nations refugee agency’s representative in Syria.
“These are very, very small numbers, but for us, even small numbers are worrying signals,” he told reporters in Geneva via video link from the Syrian-Lebanese border.
The UNHCR estimates that around 560,000 people have fled into Syria from neighboring Lebanon since late September, when months of cross-border fire between Israel and Hezbollah over the war in Gaza escalated into all-out war.
Lebanese authorities put the number even higher, at more than 610,000.
Vargas Llosa said that around 65 percent of those crossing into Syria — itself torn apart by 13 years of civil war — were Syrian nationals who had sought refuge in Lebanon from that conflict.
He pointed out that from 2017 up to September 23 this year, around 400,000 Syrians had returned to their country from Lebanon.
“We have had more or less the same number... in a period of seven to eight weeks,” he said, adding that some 150,000 Lebanese had also arrived in Syria during that period.
He hailed the “exemplary” and “extraordinary display of generosity” shown toward those arriving by communities across Syria, “whose infrastructure is destroyed, whose economy is destroyed.”
But he warned that given Syria’s own “catastrophic economic situation... it is unclear for how long this generosity will last.”
Worrying signs were already emerging, he said, pointing to the admittedly small numbers of people who were opting to return to Lebanon despite the risks.
UNHCR said that “on average up to 50 Lebanese individuals per day” were crossing back into Lebanon.
They were leaving because they thought “the conditions in Syria are appalling, and that they may be better off in Lebanon, in spite of the bombings,” Vargas Llosa said.
Back in Lebanon, they might have better support systems, easier access to services and even the ability to generate a little income, he said.
He warned that “unless there is a real injection of international support... this number of Lebanese choosing to return home to these extraordinarily difficult circumstances may grow in the coming weeks and months.”
“This would be extremely worrying.”
There were even some Syrian returnees who were opting to once again cross back into Lebanon, “primarily because of the extraordinarily dire economic conditions here in Syria,” Vargas Llosa said.
In the meantime, he said that there had recently been “an important decrease in the pace of arrivals” into Syria, from a peak of 10,000-15,000 per day to an average now of about 2,000.
Vargas Llosa charged that this was likely linked to Israel’s repeated bombings of border crossings.
“Syrians and Lebanese are very scared of using these escape routes,” he said, appealing to the Israeli military to “immediately stop these unacceptable attacks.”


Israeli forces evict 3 Palestinian families from homes in Jerusalem

Israeli forces evict 3 Palestinian families from homes in Jerusalem
Updated 09 November 2025

Israeli forces evict 3 Palestinian families from homes in Jerusalem

Israeli forces evict 3 Palestinian families from homes in Jerusalem
  • The Al-Shweiki and Odeh families were evicted from their homes in Silwan
  • About 750 Palestinians from 87 families are subject to eviction orders in nearby Batn Al-Hawa

LONDON: Israeli forces forcibly evicted three Palestinian families from their homes in the Batn Al-Hawa neighborhood of Silwan, located in occupied Jerusalem, in a measure to seize their properties.

The Al-Shweiki and Odeh families were evicted from an area south of the walled city of Jerusalem. Israeli security forces cordoned off the area and blocked roads. Asmahan Al-Shweiki, one of the homeowners, fainted and was hospitalized during the eviction, according to Wafa news agency.

“We were surprised today when Israeli police stormed the house and emptied its contents,” Ahmed Al-Shweiki, whose home was also seized, told Wafa.

He added that he was also physically assaulted, and suffered bruises and injuries during the incident.

Ateret Cohanim, an Israeli settler group founded in 1978, claims ownership of about 0.5 hectares and 200 sq. meters in Batn Al-Hawa.

About 750 Palestinians from 87 families reside in Batn Al-Hawa. All face eviction orders from Israeli courts. Similarly, dozens of families face evictions in the adjacent Silwan, where Israeli authorities have been building an underground route in the neighborhood as part of the “City of David” tourist attraction.

The Palestinian Authority’s Jerusalem governorate said the evictions are “part of a systematic Judaization plan supervised by settler organizations with direct support from the occupation government, aimed at forcibly displacing Palestinians and expanding settlements in the heart of the neighborhood.”

Since the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem in 1967, authorities have allowed Jewish settlers to reclaim properties that were historically owned by Jews during Ottoman and British rule, including in Sheikh Jarrah and the Old City.

However, it denies Palestinians their right to return, as outlined in a UN resolution, or to reclaim their private properties that their families left during the 1948 war.