Increase in the number of Syrians returning to their country

anatta

100% recycled karma
The International Organisation for Migration (IOM) announced on Wednesday that the number of Syrians returning to their homes has increased, despite the sustained condition of war in the country. However, six million people remain displaced internally, while a further five million remain displaced abroad as refugees.

The IOM reported that in the first half of this year, 600,000 Syrians returned to their homes across the country. 84% of these were registered as internally displaced, while the other 16% came back from other countries, most prominently Turkey, Jordan, Lebanon and Iraq, which together host the majority of Syrians displaced abroad.

Of the 600,000, two-thirds returned to Aleppo, after the Syrian Regime retook the entirety of the city at the end of 2016, which had remained split between regime and rebel control since 2012 and the source of much violence over the past four years.

A further 27,000 people returned to Idlib, 40,000 to Hama, while 27,000 to Damascus, whose east suburb of East Ghouta constantly witnesses fierce clashes between regime forces and rebel groups, including most prominently Faylaq al-Rahman.

Those returning to their homes gave differing reasons as to the exact nature of their return. 27% of the returning Syrians revealed that they came back home to protect their properties, 25% indicated that the economic situation improved in their area of origin, while a further 14% attributed the reason for their return to the worsening economic situation in their place of refuge.

For some, including one Syrian refugee interviewed by al-Ghad, this final reason – in conjunction with better security in the country – was enough to force them back. “We did not expect Europe to treat us this way,” said one refugee. “We expected to be treated humanely.”
https://alshahidwitness.com/syrians-return-home-war-conflict/
 
Europe’s weirdest makeshift refugee shelters
https://www.rt.com/news/400269-europe-refugee-centers-weird/

5998606adda4c843478b456a.jpg

Bijlmer prison in Amsterdam which will be used as a shelter for refugees and migrants

Two years after the European refugee crisis began, the continent is still struggling to accommodate asylum-seekers, and many countries have resorted to housing new arrivals in offbeat and unlikely shelters.
Germany

Germany, the most sought-after destination for refugees and migrants seeking a better life in Europe, was among many nations forced to think outside the box when floods of mostly Syrian refugees arrived within its borders.

A World War II airport, once dubbed the “mother of all airports” by British architect Normal Foster, makes the list of Europe’s weirdest shelters.

599853d8dda4c8913f8b4568.jpg

Tempelhof Airport

Located in Berlin, built in 1927 and extensively developed by the Nazis in the 1930s, Tempelhof Airport’s main building was one of the largest structures in Europe in its heyday. Since then, its facilities have been used for more than just hosting aircraft. It has also housed war prisoners and been the set of movie blockbusters like ‘The Bourne Supremacy’ and ‘The Hunger Games.’

However, it has now traded in its Hollywood role for a more humanitarian one, serving as a temporary home for refugees who live in cubicle-like structures on the premises.

Despite having a capacity for 7,000 refugees, approximately 600 are currently housed there. A total of 3,000 people previously called the shelter home, most of whom were from Iraq and Syria. However, many have been relocated or returned home.

However, it is not just German bases that the country has put into use. Barracks at a former British base in the town of Herford were also turned into refugee housing following a deal between the city and federal government.

599853d8dda4c8913f8b4569.jpg

Herford military base
The new arrivals moved in after the Brits officially handed over the keys in 2015.

The former base has since made headlines after it was reported in June that a 10-year-old girl was raped at the site by an asylum-seeker.

Moving away from military bases, another unusual place used to hold asylum-seekers is an office building in the Lichtenberg district of Berlin, once the headquarters of the infamous Stasi, the East German secret police.

About 7,000 employees worked in the building under the supervision of Markus Wolf, dubbed “the man without a face,” as Western intelligence famously had no photo of him. When the Berlin Wall came down in 1989, it was stormed by protesters who wanted to prevent its staff from destroying secret documents, while in the 1990s it was used by Deutsche Bahn, the national rail company.

It now offers temporary housing for hundreds of families from Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan, with each office room housing up to six people.

With only 60,000 applications for asylum at the height of the crisis in 2015, compared to other countries such as Sweden and Germany, the number of refugees entering the Netherlands has been relatively small. For that reason, and because of the extra prison space, the Netherlands seemed to struggle less with finding accommodation for asylum-seekers.

The Netherlands
Around 600 people from Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq, and Eritrea currently occupy four of the six towers in the Bijlmerbajes prison complex in the southeast of Amsterdam. Unlike regular inmates, they are free to come and go from their cells and decorate them as they please, while taking part in activities to help them integrate into society if their application is approved. Aside from Bijlmerbajes, at least 12 other jails have been turned into temporary shelter for asylum-seekers, which has the added bonus of keeping prison staff employed.

With only 60,000 applications for asylum at the height of the crisis in 2015, compared to other countries such as Sweden and Germany, the number of refugees entering the Netherlands has been relatively small. For that reason, and because of the extra prison space, the Netherlands seemed to struggle less with finding accommodation for asylum-seekers.

Italy
Due to its position on the Mediterranean Sea and proximity to North Africa, Italy is on the frontline for new arrivals seeking asylum in the European Union.

Once they arrive, some are taken to properties that once belonged to convicted mobsters, but have since been seized by the Italian government.

One such place is a property known as ‘the Fortress’ in the town of Lecco, 50 kilometers north of Milan. It was confiscated from ‘Ndrangheta boss Coco Trovato and used to house 20 young men from Africa.

59986e12fc7e9365248b4567.jpg

Migrants and refugees sit on a rubber boat during a rescue operation of the Topaz Responder, a rescue ship run by Maltese NGO "Moas" and the Italian Red Cross with the help of the Libyan coastguards, on November 4, 2016
further south in Calabria, the NGO Luna Rossa has housed dozens of unaccompanied minors in yet another crime lord’s mansion, mostly teenagers from sub-Saharan Africa.

The center has faced mafia intimidation, including shots fired at the windows and a bomb thrown at the door over the Christmas of 2011, as well as opposition from a few local residents, one of whom claimed a refugee boy tried to rape him.

The claim was dismissed by police, but nevertheless, a small crowd of people assembled outside the building and started shouting anti-immigrant slogans.

It is perhaps unsurprising that Europe has ended up with an array of weird and wacky refugee shelters, as the continent was on the receiving end of the worst refugee crisis since World War II in 2015, when more than one million asylum-seekers arrived.

Most of the refugees were from Syria, where a brutal civil war has so far claimed the lives of more than 320,000 since March 2011, according to UN estimates.

But simply arriving in Europe does not guarantee a dry place to sleep. Some have been forced to set up their own makeshift accommodation, largely due to overcrowding at shelters.

[img\https://cdn.rt.com/files/2017.08/original/59985764dda4c8ef418b4567.jpg[/img]
The Calais "Jungle" camp, in Calais, northern France,

Migrants in the notorious ‘Jungle’ camp in Calais, France were left with no place to go after the camp was dismantled in October 2016. While some were transferred to shelters across the country, others were left to sleep rough in the streets.

Many of those who were relocated to other cities eventually returned to Calais, sleeping on the streets, at the train station, or at so-called ‘secret camps,’ according to The Independent. The migrants in Calais hope to eventually reach the United Kingdom.

59985840dda4c85f428b4567.jpg

Police were less keen to accept the return of migrants, with Human Rights Watch (HRW) reporting in July that French authorities “routinely” pepper spray asylum-seekers in Calais, even while they sleep. It also said that officers spray migrants’ food and deploy batons against minors.


Meanwhile, many of those who were uprooted following the Jungle camp closure found their way to the French capital, erecting makeshift camps. A total of 30 such camps were cleared in Paris between June 2015 and November 2016.

59985935fc7e93f6188b4567.jpg

Migrants and refugees sit as they gather in the streets during the evacuation of a makeshift camp at Porte de la Chapelle, northern Paris, on July 7, 2017
 
well it's good news..Syria is in shambles -it's pulverized into rocks.
It's going to take a generation (20 years) at least to recover.

I hope the good people who return can get the international help they need.
 
well it's good news..Syria is in shambles -it's pulverized into rocks.
It's going to take a generation (20 years) at least to recover.

I hope the good people who return can get the international help they need.
They need a new Marshall Plan, although don't expect any Sunni Muslim countries like Saudi Arabia to help.
 
It doesn't get reported much but the Russian and Syrian armies have been kicking ISIS tail. A year ago Aleppo was a war zone but Syrians have returned there.

It's also under reported that many of the refugees were fleeing ISIS and not Assad. And with ISIS all but cleaned out, Syrians are returning.

For our part, Trump made a good move in withdrawing CIA support of the anti-Assad rebels. Many of the munitions we supplied them were ending up in the hands of terrorists---when the rebels themselves, weren't terrorists. And it's allowed the Syrian and Russian army to focus on ISIS.

It was a great move by Trump. But hardly anyone pays attention to it.
 
It doesn't get reported much but the Russian and Syrian armies have been kicking ISIS tail. A year ago Aleppo was a war zone but Syrians have returned there.

It's also under reported that many of the refugees were fleeing ISIS and not Assad. And with ISIS all but cleaned out, Syrians are returning.

For our part, Trump made a good move in withdrawing CIA support of the anti-Assad rebels. Many of the munitions we supplied them were ending up in the hands of terrorists---when the rebels themselves, weren't terrorists. And it's allowed the Syrian and Russian army to focus on ISIS.

It was a great move by Trump. But hardly anyone pays attention to it.
If he wants his good news on the things he is doing to get out, he needs to quit tweeting, it detracts from everything he does. He needs to stay on script, listen to his handlers
 
If he wants his good news on the things he is doing to get out, he needs to quit tweeting, it detracts from everything he does. He needs to stay on script, listen to his handlers

I won't argue that Trump doesn't get in his own way at times.

And it wasn't an earth shaking development and it happened during the peak of Russian Fever. But it was, finally, the US doing something smart in the region. The only democrat accolade came from Tulsi Gabbard.
 
They need a new Marshall Plan, although don't expect any Sunni Muslim countries like Saudi Arabia to help.
SA has major budget problems. King Salman is doing reforms , but it's still a petro-welfare state.

I think you might under-estimate the region on this one-although getting both Iran and SA to contribute
on the same page ain't happening
 
I won't argue that Trump doesn't get in his own way at times.

And it wasn't an earth shaking development and it happened during the peak of Russian Fever. But it was, finally, the US doing something smart in the region. The only democrat accolade came from Tulsi Gabbard.
good for her! She's almost actually hated by the warhawks in her party.
She's been consistent on not interference in Syria -I think she's been there ( and Dennis Kucinich of course)
Sometimes I wonder if her and Rand Paul are the only sane one's still around..
 
good for her! She's almost actually hated by the warhawks in her party.
She's been consistent on not interference in Syria -I think she's been there ( and Dennis Kucinich of course)
Sometimes I wonder if her and Rand Paul are the only sane one's still around..

She's much better looking than Rand Paul lol.
 
Democrats turn on Gabbard amid Syria stance
op Democrats are taking aim at one of their own, assailing Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard for appearing to defend Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad against allegations his regime dumped chemical weapons on a rebel-held area.

Center for American Progress head Neera Tanden, who was a trusted adviser to Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton, and former Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean lit into Gabbard on Twitter for her Syria stance.

“This is a disgrace. Gabbard should not be in Congress,” Dean tweeted on Saturday.

abbard has claimed that Assad is not alone in possessing chemical weapons, also suggesting that rebel and terror groups inside Syria have access to them; however, only Assad’s regime, among those groups, has jets such as the ones reportedly used to drop the chemical agent on Idlib. But as evidence mounts against Assad, Gabbard’s arguments have shifted to railing against the push for regime change.

“Escalating Syria regime change war = more children and innocent people dying. #ResistTrumpsWar now,” she tweeted Friday, adding: “Have we not learned from Iraq and Libya? The road to hell is paved w/ good intentions. Escalation means more dead children, more refugees.”

On Monday, Gabbard addressed her critics:
“Those who’ve declared Trump a habitual liar now vilify those refusing to blindly follow him into another regime change war. Hypocrisy.”

Gabbard visited Syria in January, meeting with Assad during a controversial “fact-finding” trip in the region. She was accompanied by former Rep. Dennis Kucinich, a Fox News contributor, who at the time stressed the importance of letting Syrians decide their political future.

Given Gabbard’s journey from rising Democratic star – who also was under consideration for a Trump Cabinet position – to her recent position urging caution in addressing Assad's atrocities, Tanden wrote that she felt deceived.

Referencing a tweet from December 2012, when Tanden praised Gabbard as potential Senate material, Tanden tweeted: “Yes, I thought this before she met with a ruthless dictator.

“I was had.”
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2017/04/11/democrats-turn-on-gabbard-amid-syria-stance.html
 
^It's accepted as fact that Assad gasses his own people [not saying he doesn't] but it's the same old relying on the IC for evidence. I'm not quite as trusting as I once was.

But it's a contentious issue amongst my Twitter peeps who follow Syria closely.
 
^It's accepted as fact that Assad gasses his own people [not saying he doesn't] but it's the same old relying on the IC for evidence. I'm not quite as trusting as I once was.

But it's a contentious issue amongst my Twitter peeps who follow Syria closely.
ya. I don't care-sorry I just don't.
Syria is a Giant War Crime as it is..
Just stay out of the war -there are no good options to arm anyone
 
^It's accepted as fact that Assad gasses his own people [not saying he doesn't] but it's the same old relying on the IC for evidence. I'm not quite as trusting as I once was.

But it's a contentious issue amongst my Twitter peeps who follow Syria closely.

During our own Civil War, Lincoln murdered over 300,000 of his own citizens and launched a scorched earth terrorist campaign against his civilians. Who are we to judge.
 
letting these people return to their homes, even if faced with the massive undertaking of rebuilding has always been the desired solution.
Setting up safe havens meantime is a much better idea than assimilating them into foreign societies.

Trump said this early on, I have seen no evidence of policy though.
If they are in fact starting to return to their homes then I don't really care whom gets credit, it's a win for them.
 
letting these people return to their homes, even if faced with the massive undertaking of rebuilding has always been the desired solution.
Setting up safe havens meantime is a much better idea than assimilating them into foreign societies.

Trump said this early on, I have seen no evidence of policy though.
If they are in fact starting to return to their homes then I don't really care whom gets credit, it's a win for them.

Yup.

If Syrians want to live under a dictator, why is that our problem? We should be encouraging them to return.

The evidence of Trump's policy was pointed out in my prior post. Our CIA had no business supporting the rebels because we have no business doing regime change in Syria---even if it's by proxy.
 
Back
Top