As Syrians fled to neighbouring Lebanon and Jordan, they could only be offered food and refuge from war. Three years since the crisis first emerged, foreign assistance is running out, donor fatigue is setting in, and host countries’ capacity to help is fast diminishing
There are no winners in a humanitarian tragedy — in Lebanon alone, there are 1,078,338 registered refugees from Syria. The country is already home to an estimated 500,000 Palestinian refugees who have been living there for over 50 years now. Then there are about 50,000 Iraqi refugees as well. With resources limited and already stretched, Lebanon is reeling from the Middle East’s refugee crisis.
“Refugees in Lebanon are only given $18 every month by the United Nations (UN) to cover their food, water, and bills expenses even though Lebanon is an expensive country. They have not been allowed to work either,” explains Manolo Ty, a German artist who decided to photograph the story of the refugee camps in Lebanon, between Zahle and the adjoining border.
Ty managed to visit two camps, along with a translator and a refugee in his former camp.
“It is worse than what we can imagine. I was in camps with around 50-100 tents. Each tent accommodates between five and 10 people. One of the things that I noticed was the way they had maintained their tents from inside. They had kept it tidy and somewhat decorated it with whatever little they had,” says Ty.
“Although the UN itself does not ask for rent, the landowners who own the land on which the refugee camps are situated, charge them. There is no proper planning of the camps and they seem to be scattered all over the place,” he narrates.
“I could see the UN logo sprayed on the tents, and believed that the organisation must be doing substantial work there. But when I spoke to the people, the story was quite different and heartbreaking: most of the tents were not even given to them by the UN but their logo is sprayed on them. People have to pay the rent for tents, while they have to organise food, water, and power on their own. They either buy water or arrange it from the grounds/fields nearby, which are very unhygienic and causing health problems,” he describes.
The absence of health facilities for refugees is indeed a concern in such situations. In recent times, the same factor has also been highlighted in Australian detention centres for refugees coming by boat.
In 2012, conflict in Syria gave birth to a refugee crisis that is changing the face of the Middle East and beyond. Millions took refuge in neighbouring countries but their hosts are now bursting at the seams. Is there an end in sight to the humanitarian catastrophe?
“I met a man named Achmed who has been living there since three years but has never seen a doctor. I photographed him and his recently injured big toe. Achmed injured his foot while repairing their tent building. There is no doctor to go to. He has no money for medicine. And he has not seen a doctor coming to their camp since he arrived three years ago,” says Ty.
Across in Jordan, the situation is equally daunting.
The biggest refugee camp in Jordan is Zaatari, constructed some 10 kilometres east of Mafraq city. The camp has evolved into a city of tents and mobile trailers in the middle of the desert. Thousands upon thousands of refugees reside there and the streets are literally comprised of hundreds and hundreds of tents.
Lebanon is in no position to sustain the refugees, and I fear that a civil war might erupt in Lebanon if the current Syrian crisis is not dealt with immediately.
“It’s quite crowded there and can get very hot and stuffy. It’s still not an ideal place to live but there really aren’t too many places where you could house an extraordinarily large number of refugees in a country as small as Jordan,” says Rachel Palmer, a graduate student in the Foreign Service programme at Georgetown University, Washington DC, who has been working on the ground with Syrian refugees, particularly in Jordan.
According to Palmer, the UN has been providing an array of services at the camp, including medical, sanitation, education, food vouchers, education for children in the camps, shelter, and safe spaces for women and girls.
“The UN operates as an enormous conglomerate of agencies that all play different roles. For example, the UNHCR handles registration of Syrians and provides them with tents and food. The WFP has an ongoing food voucher programme for Syrians, although the allotment has sadly decreased due to lack of funding,” she explains.
“The OCHA coordinates humanitarian efforts between the various stakeholders in Jordan and abroad. Then there are countless NGOs on the ground: Islamic Relief, Mercy Corps, Save the Children, International Rescue Committee, to name a few.”
Despite the support and amenities being offered, though, not all want to stay lodged in tent cities.
“One of the women I had met left the Zataari camp after pushing and pushing for a permit to go live in a community outside of the camp. Her six-year-old son had died of a preventable illness in the camp over the winter and she was adamant that remaining in Zataari would cause the deaths of the rest of her children,” she explains.
Ty echoes Palmer’s experience; he too did not find “a single person” at the camps who wanted to stay there.
“Even if the refugees could go back, the question remains whether they would go back. There is nothing left in their home towns, everything has been razed to the ground, and there is rubble everywhere. If they go back they would have to build everything from scratch. The adults are worried if their children will ever see a better life. If the situation worsens, then probably they will stay or travel to Europe in search of a better life,” he says.
But what has been the attitude of the Lebanese and Jordanian governments and people in dealing with these refugees?
For Ty, the situation in Lebanon is more urgent since the contradictions within are only sharpening fault lines in the country.
“There is a big political divide within the Lebanon government. They actually do not have time to think about the refugees. The government has already said that it cannot cope with the current Syria refugees, the number of which mounts up to more than one million,” he says.
“Lebanon has tensions with Israel, and Syria in the east, and it also has a vast area that makes up for deserts. They already have very limited resources for their own citizens, and the Lebanese government insists that the UN first provide aid to its citizens. Lebanon is in no position to sustain the refugees, and I fear that a civil war might erupt in Lebanon if the current Syrian crisis is not dealt with immediately,” he argues.
On the other hand, Palmer is more appreciative of Jordan’s efforts, even though there are certain problems and contradictions at play.