A few weeks ago, a refugee using the pseudonym “Laila” left Dahiye, a South Beirut suburb smashed by Israeli airstrikes. She fled with her family, and travelled east to the Syrian border, with just enough money to cover the journey. But when she crossed the frontier, at the Al-Dabusiyeh checkpoint, Syrian authorities forcibly disappeared her spouse. “Until now, I don’t know where my husband is or why they took him,” Laila explained in a voice note. “I’m currently staying with my family. We are all staying in two rooms. My children are sick and I can’t afford to buy them medicine, diapers or milk.”
Not every Syrian who has crossed back from Lebanon has faced Bashar al-Assad’s wrath so directly — yet in her poverty and her desperation, Laila is far from alone. Around 440,000 people are estimated to have fled Lebanon to Syria since Israel escalated its military offensive in September. Like Laila, most are Syrians: some 1.5 million fled the Assad regime during their country’s bloody civil war. And, just like Laila, they now face a Catch-22: either taking their chances in Lebanon, dodging Israeli bombs, or else returning home to the same dangers that forced them to flee in the first place.
While returnees are currently coming from nearby Lebanon, meanwhile, Syrians could yet return from far further afield. In mid-October, Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni of Italy urged EU leaders to explore strategies to enable the return of Syrian refugees, as they discussed hardening the bloc’s migration policy at a summit in Brussels. Ahead of the meeting, Meloni stressed the need to work with “all actors” to make this happen, including the Assad regime itself. And while the talk right now is of “voluntary” returns, some Syrians already fear that the Europeans may yet use coercion — conveniently dumping their liberal agenda and condemning many more people to disappearance or worse.
For Syria is far from safe. That’s clear enough from the numbers, with the Syrian Network for Human Rights (SNHR) reporting at least 26 cases of returnees who have been arrested and detained by government forces. SNHR’s September report recorded 206 arbitrary detentions across the country. That included nine children and 17 women, even as almost a dozen returnees were swept up too. Government forces, for their part, were responsible for 128 of these cases — but Kurdish and Islamist factions were also involved.
Dovetail that with countless anecdotal stories of torture, expulsion and murder, and it’s little wonder that so many Syrians are reluctant to head east. But what of those who do decide to take the plunge? The journey into Syria is itself fraught with danger. Many are also obliged to travel on the backs of pickup trucks, or struggle through on foot to avoid arrest. Some returnees prefer heading through opposition-held territories to avoid being picked up by government troops, though that carries its own risks: of extortion by opposition militias and bandits.
If they chose to return via official channels, there is a cost: $100 upon re-entry. “People scrape some clothes and valuables, rush away, and are forced to walk,” says Mohammad Al-Abdullah, director of the SJAC. “Nothing in those returns is voluntary, safe or dignified. And though Damascus has often made promises of amnesty for returnees, these rules don’t apply to those thousands of Syrians who were previously detained for peaceful political protest. In any case, Al-Abdallah says that government forgiveness cannot be trusted, describing Assad’s proclamations as a PR exercise aimed at Western countries eager to dump their Syrians.
After 13 years of war, these refugees are returning to a land of shattered cities, fallow farms, and inflation hovering at 120%. They usually arrive with very limited resources: nine out of 10 refugee families in Lebanon live in extreme poverty. Even if they do have funds, meanwhile, they’re likely to find their homes in ruins, or else discover they’ve been confiscated by the state. Flour, oil and other basic food stuffs are hard to find, and the government certainly won’t help new arrivals secure them. In fact, there’s some evidence that returnees are actively discriminated against for aid and shelter, even as electricity, water and healthcare are in desperately short supply too.
President Assad presides over a ghastly regime, and I do not in any way wish to seem to defend him. However, he didn’t drag his country into bloodshed. A coalition of the usual suspects, funding, encouraging and supporting as I recall something called the Free Syrian Army attempted to overthrow him in a coup. Fair play if you like to them, and perhaps the world and Syria would have been a better place had they succeeded.
It’s all very well wishing that Assad had gone quietly, but the disastrous destabilizing of Syria wasn’t his idea. He was running the usual oppressive authoritarian state that appears to be the recipe for stability in that part of the world, and would no doubt have been happy to continue doing so.
It’s funny Syria, as a multicultural society may well be the future.
They’re just going to leave again and come back. There is no solution that doesn’t involve removing Assad.
So of the 400,000 who have returned, 28 have been arrested/detained. Imagine if 400,000 expat Brits returned home. I’d expect hundreds to be banged up for one reason or another, regardless of the fact that some of these hundreds of thousands would have been supporting the Islamist/western-backed uprising against the government. This article places none of the blame on the returnees, describing them as all innocence. The regime granting a general amnesty and specifically targetting those it believes to be a cause for concern is remarkably lenient. This isn’t the West where we let back people who went out and murdered in the name of ISIS. In this case the murdering and terrorising took place on home soil.
There has been a peaceful settlement to the country’s war. Assad won. You have to move on from there as the regime seems to be doing and stop trying to relitigate the past.