U.N.: More
Than 600,000 Syrians Have Returned Home In 2017, by Merrit Kennedy, 8/11/17
Syrians
arriving last month from Jarablus, in Aleppo province, to their old
neighborhood of al-Waer, in Homs, Syria. They left their homes to escape the
government of Syrian President Bashar Assad, and now they are going back.
A
rising number of Syrians who fled are returning to their homes, with more than
600,000 going back in the first seven months of this year, according
to the International Organization for Migration.
The
U.N. migration agency says that number is comparable to the number of returns
spanning the entire year in 2016.
The Syrian
government has been stressing that people are coming home, NPR's Ruth Sherlock
reports, and state media have been posting photos and accounts of such returns.
However,
it's worth noting that the rate of new displacements during the beginning of
this year was significantly higher than the number of returns. According to the
IOM, "an estimated 808,661 people were displaced, many for the second or
third time, and over 6 million in total currently remain displaced within the
country."
Most
of those going home, 84 percent, were displaced within Syria. "The next
highest number of people ... returned from Turkey, followed by Lebanon, Jordan
and Iraq," the IOM adds.
The
migration agency says that their returns "have mainly been spontaneous but
not necessarily voluntary, safe or sustainable," adding that "they
cannot, at present, be considered within the context of a durable solutions
Aleppo
governorate saw the highest number, at 67 percent, and Aleppo city was the most
common destination there. In December, government troops recaptured the parts
of Aleppo city that had been held by rebels for four years, though there are
still portions of the governorate that are rebel-held.
People
gave many reasons for coming home, the IOM reports:
27
percent said they were returning to protect their assets or property.
25
percent said it was because the economic situation got better in the area they
are from in Syria.
14
percent said it was because the economic situation got worse in the area where
they had fled to.
11 percent
said it was because of "social and cultural issues such as tribal links,
political affiliations or any other obstacle preventing integration in their
area of displacement."
11
percent said it was because of improvement in the security situation in the
area they wanted to return to.
Nearly
all of the returnees – 97 percent – were able to return to their own homes,
with the remaining three percent living with hosts, in abandoned or rented
accommodation, or in informal settlements, according to the IOM.
But
the country's devastated infrastructure means that just 41 percent of returnees
have access to water and 39 percent to health services.
According
to the BBC, the U.N.'s
refugee agency recently "started
scaling up its operations inside Syria to better address the needs of those
returning home," even as it discourages people from doing so, stressing
safety concerns.
And
there are signs that many Syrians who fled believe they will never
return. The
PR firm ASDA'A Burson-Marsteller recently
surveyed 400 young Syrian refugees in Jordan and Lebanon, and found that 54
percent of them think it's unlikely that they will return permanently.
Earlier
this month, Ruth reported on a different kind of return. She says thousands of
Syrians displaced in Lebanon returned to Syria as part of a deal after months
of fighting along the border with Lebanon. But, "these are not Syrians
going back to their homes," she says.
Here's
more: "These are people who are being taken to Idlib, which is a province
in the far north of the country. Most of them have never been there before. But
it's a move that's being encouraged by the regime and its allies.
"So
what's happening is that as the government tries to consolidate control over
parts of Syria, it's offering people who fought with the opposition this sort
of option to go to this part of the country because that part is still
rebel-held."
Comments
So, let
me understand this. Syrians are returning to Syria, but some are not Syrians
and some are terrorists and others don’t want to return to Syria, because they
think they would be required to join the Syrian Army. And some Syrians are
being returned to parts of Syria they are not from.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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