U.N.: More than 4,500 Syrians Sheltered in N. Lebanon

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

More than 4,500 Syrians fleeing a deadly crackdown on a revolt against the regime of President Bashar al-Assad have found shelter in Lebanon, with hundreds crossing the border in the last two weeks, the United Nations said Friday.

A report released by the U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR) said 4,510 Syrians, including women and children, had registered in northern Lebanon, up from 3,798 at the beginning of December.

The majority of those who fled to Lebanon this month hail from the central Homs region and nearby Tal Kalakh, where regime forces have sought to crush massive protests demanding Assad step down.

Most of them had settled with host families "in difficult circumstances" in villages near the border as well as in the Akkar district, located between the Lebanese-Syrian border and the coastal city of Tripoli, the report said.

Nineteen wounded Syrians, including an 11-year-old girl, were also hospitalized in the north this week alone, according to UNHCR.

"Several were in coma when they reached the hospitals and one person reportedly died from his injuries," read the report.

Syria has planted landmines along its border with Lebanon in a bid to prevent weapons smuggling and dissidents from fleeing the fierce crackdown by the regime in Damascus against a nine-month revolt, Lebanese officials in the north have said.

Lebanon and Syria share a 330-kilometer border but have yet to agree on official demarcation.

Syrian troops have regularly staged incursions into Lebanon in recent weeks, killing at least three people when they opened fire on border villages, according to Lebanese officials.

There have been growing fears in Lebanon that the bloodshed in Syria could spill over the border.

The Lebanese opposition, Washington and the United Nations have condemned the incursions.

But the Hizbullah-led Lebanese government has for the most part stayed silent on the issue.

Comments 6
Missing zdm343 16 December 2011, 22:10

Most of these "refugees" are criminals and fugitives. They should be returned to Syria..

Default-user-icon lebanonfirst (Guest) 16 December 2011, 22:59

@zdm343 you are extremely wrong, if you took a second to analyze the situation rather than blindly follow a failing ideology you would realize that our sovereignty is being put in question. The word sovereignty does not apply to lebanon anymore, because sovereign would mean we do not allow foreign forces to come into our country and shoot into our villages. Since our government, at the moment, is just an extension of the failing regime and to-be failing regimes of the world, the word sovereignty is inapplicable. There are different sorts of occupation, we might not be incurring a physical occupation but we are incurring a political occupation which has crippled our economy, democratic ideals and social agenda. I you so so gladly embrace the incursion of foreign power into your country, allowing them to plant mines on our soil and put our people at risk in the guise of "capturing criminals" i suggest you trade your lebanese passport for one which suits your political motivations.

Thumb shab 16 December 2011, 23:23

We should take them in our homes like they did when the filthy militia started the war with Israel

Missing peace 17 December 2011, 02:08

poor zdm343... i pity his low IQ....

Default-user-icon Proud Syrian (Guest) 17 December 2011, 04:46

shab, so now you care about syrians you disgusting hypocrite? Unfortunatly, your a typical lebanese with selective memory. You used to curse us day and night. Thousands of syrians were killed or injured by both march 14 and 8 supporters but mostly 14 and now you pretend to care? You disgust me. We dont need support from scum like you. You are more suited to be from the bashar el asad thugs.

Thumb shab 17 December 2011, 10:38

I will curse anyone who invades Lebanon. Civilians must be helped so they can return home as free men.