Expulsion of dozens of Syrians from Lebanon

 


As anti-Syrian sentiment rises amid a terrible economic crisis, Lebanon has deported hundreds of Syrians back to the war-torn nation they fled, according to security authorities and a humanitarian source on Friday.

According to a relative, one of the deported Syrians was an army defector who had been warned that "his life is in danger."

According to an army officer who spoke to AFP on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to speak to the media, "the army has deported more than 50 Syrians from Lebanon in the past two weeks."

Numerous Syrians, according to a different security officer, were removed.

They said that the army intelligence unit of Lebanon had been harshly prosecuting illegal Syrians, detaining them, and then passing them over to border guards who evicted them from Lebanon.

After the savage repression of anti-regime rallies in 2011 that started the country's civil war, hundreds of thousands of Syrians fled to the neighbouring country of Lebanon.

According to authorities, Lebanon is home to almost two million Syrian refugees, but only about 830,000 of them are officially registered with the UN.

Lebanese authorities have long advocated for the repatriation of Syrian refugees, and they have undertaken many repatriation initiatives that they claim are voluntary but that human rights organisations claim are coerced.

Rights organisations dispute the notion that refugee returns to Syria are secure and claim that some refugees have experienced persecution.

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