Syrian refugees returning to their war-battered country have faced alleged torture, arbitrary arrests and extrajudicial killings, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said Wednesday.
A report titled "'Our Lives Are Like Death': Syrian Refugee Returns from Lebanon and Jordan" documented "grave abuse" at the hands of government forces against 65 returnees and their family members between 2017 and 2021.
Of the 65, 21 faced arrests and arbitrary detention, 13 said they were tortured, and five cases of extrajudicial killings were recorded, the report said.
There were also accounts of 17 enforced disappearances, three kidnappings and one alleged sexual violence case.
"The harrowing accounts of torture, enforced disappearance and abuse that refugees who went back to Syria endured should make it patently clear that Syria is not safe for returns," said Nadia Hardman, a researcher on refugee and migrant rights at HRW.
Refugees in Lebanon and Jordan in particular have faced mounting direct and indirect pressure to return to Syria, in violation of the principle of nonrefoulement, the rights organization said.
In September, the U.N. announced that the toll of identified individuals killed in the Syrian conflict had risen to 350,209, though it warned that the real number could be much higher.
New York-based HRW accused Lebanon of pursuing an "aggressive returns agenda" through measures such as the demolition of concrete shelters, curfews and forced evictions.
The situation of Syrian refugees in Lebanon has been severely exacerbated by the country's economic crisis, with 90 percent of them left in extreme poverty, the group said.
HRW warned that the heightening pressures and lack of access to information could result in refugees feeling they have no option but to return.
The U.N. refugee agency estimates that over 6.6 million Syrians have been forced to seek refuge in neighboring countries.
"No country should be forcing refugees to return to Syria, so long as the Syrian government commits widespread human rights abuses," Hardman said.
"A decade on, returning refugees are still at risk of persecution from the same government they fled."
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