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50,000 Syrians return home from Lebanon

By Reuters
September 26, 2018

BEIRUT: Fifty thousand Syrians have returned home from Lebanon so far in 2018 and the number could reach 200,000 in a year’s time if it continues at this rate, a top Lebanese official said on Tuesday.

Major General Abbas Ibrahim, head of Lebanon’s General Security directorate, told Reuters his security agency had organised the return of 25,000 Syrians in coordination with Damascus.

Another 25,000 had made their own way home. Lebanon is hosting 976,000 registered Syrian refugees, according to the UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR).

The government says the total number of Syrians in the country is around 1.5 million.

Lebanese politicians have been calling for Syrian refugees to go home as President Bashar al-Assad wins back more of the country, saying Lebanon cannot cope with hosting a number of refugees equivalent to a quarter of its population.

Ibrahim is coordinating with Damascus over the return of thousands of Syrians who want to go home. Their names are first sent to Damascus for approval. Ibrahim said on average 10 percent of them are rejected by Damascus.

Anyone wanted by the Syrian authorities is told so they can decide whether to stay or go home to "settle their affairs". The Syrian conflict that erupted in 2011 has generated 5.6 million refugees in the Middle East.

UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi said during a visit to Beirut last month that refugees were concerned about issues including the lack of infrastructure and fear of retribution and military conscription.