Kuwaiti delegation announce development projects in Lebanon

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — A delegation from the Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development (KFAED) signed two agreements to benefit Tripoli residents and Syrian refugees, according to the delegation director Abdul Wahab Al-Bader.

“The first is a loan to fund a project for the city of Tripoli, which is worth 5.5 million Kuwaiti Dinars,” al-Bader said. “The second agreement is a donation by the fund as part of Kuwait’s commitment to support Syrian refugees.”

The 18.7 million dollar loan will be used to finance a slaughterhouse project in Tripoli, according to the Kuwaiti News Agency. 19 million dollars will go to Syrian refugees.

The delegation met for a private meeting with Speaker Nabih Berri at his home in Ain al-Tineh before announcing the two agreements.

They also met with Prime Minister Tammam Salam at the Grand Serail where they discussed the progress of several Kuwaiti-funded development projects, including the training of governmental employees.

KFAED is also expected to finance a number of projects in southern Beirut, including an emergency center in Ghobeiry, the historical Beaufort Castle in Nabatieh and the project of Litani River in Bekaa Valley.

The delegation previously supported the Litani River Project in 2012, which is a $330 million first phase project that aims to channel channel from the Qaroun Reservoir to 340,000 residents in South Lebanon.

The second phase is expected to provide agricultural land with irrigation networks, facilities, and land rehabilitation.

Upon arriving, the delegation, headed by Director General Abdul Wahab Al-Bader, and including regional manager for the Arab Countries Marwan Al-Ghanim, was received by at the airport by Third Secretary in Kuwait Embassy Mohammad Al-Wogayan, representative of KFAED resident in Lebanon Nawaf Al-Dabous, and Chairman of Lebanon’s Council for Development and Reconstruction Nabil Al-Jesr.

UAE airlifts emergency aid to Syrian refugees in Lebanon

imrs

(BEKAA, LEBANON) — UAE President Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed al-Nahyan ordered an emergency airlift of blankets, winter clothes, medicine, food and heaters to refugee camps in Jordan, Lebanon and Iraq, Gaza and other parts of Palestine, as a fierce storm batters part of the middle east , according to a report published by The National newspaper.

The first flight was due to take off in the early hours of Wednesday morning, according to the report.

Education Minister Elias Bou Saab appealed on Wednesday to the international community to follow the example of the United Arab Emirates.

“All other states that could help in these conditions should endeavor to assist,” Bou Saab said after meeting with Lebanon’s Grand Mufti Abdul-Latif Derian.

According to Bou Saab, as long as Syrian refugees are present in Lebanon then the country is obliged to fulfill its humanitarian duty toward them.

A snow storm sweeping the Levant region has already taken its toll on Syrian refugees in Lebanon, who are facing freezing temperatures, heavy snow, hail, rain and thunderstorms.

Snow caused several tents to collapse, as refugees tried to keep warm inside their unheated shelters by burning wood and waste paper.

Several refugee families had their tents blown down by strong winds that battered Lebanon overnight and had to seek shelter with other refugees.

In east Lebanon, three Syrians, including an 8-year-old boy, died in the storm in the outskirts of Shebaa in Mount Hermon on the Syrian border.

More than three million Syrians have fled their country during nearly four years of war — with more than 1.2 million seeking refuge in Lebanon alone — creating an enduring humanitarian, economic and political crisis that has put extraordinary pressure on Syria’s neighbors, especially Lebanon, Turkey and Jordan.

Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid al Maktoum, ruler of Dubai and UAE VP called upon the global and Arab media to draw the world’s attention to the refugees suffering in the cold in the Levant. “I invite all my brothers and friends in the Arab and global media to focus on this tragedy and by doing so help the aiding of these refugees, especially women and children,” he said.

UNHCR: Syrian refugees in Bekaa caught in winter storm

Screen Shot 2015-01-07 at 12.35.36 PM

GENEVA, January 7 (UNHCR) – Thousands of refugees across Lebanon and Jordan have been struggling to keep warm and protect their shelters this week as severe winter storms bring plummeting temperatures, heavy snow, strong winds and lashing rain to the region.

UNHCR field staff say Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley was blanketed in snow on Wednesday morning, cutting off roads and affecting tens of thousands of refugees – many of whom live in makeshift shelters in more than 850 informal settlements set up in vacant lots, abandoned buildings, garages, sheds and on farmland.

Some refugees are managing to get through the storm to UNHCR’s registration centre in the town of Zahle, where they are being processed by staff. Others spent the day huddling around heaters or scraping snow from the roofs of their shelters to stave off collapse. There are reports of damaged homes in informal settlements, where makeshift shelters have collapsed under the weight of snow.

Conditions have been particularly bad in Arsal and its outskirts, where altitudes range from 1,300 to 1,400 metres. Six emergency shelters have been set up where UNHCR partners are ready to receive families leaving tented sites, and local municipalities are clearing roads. Across the Bekaa Valley, UNHCR and partners are working to provide people with materials to repair shelters. Plans are also under way to replace blankets, mattresses and other items that have been damaged.

UNHCR began its winter aid programme in Lebanon last October, focusing on helping the most vulnerable refugees with cash, stoves and blankets. Winter support also includes fuel vouchers to help people living above 500 metres, including many of those now blanketed by snow in the Bekaa Valley. Plastic sheeting, wood and basic tools to help keep accommodation well insulated have been distributed to almost 250,000 people living in unfinished buildings and informal settlements.

While much winter aid has been provided, UNHCR remains concerned. “Despite our best efforts, the situation in Lebanon remains precarious for refugees given the extremely poor conditions in which they live and the scattered nature of the population,” UNHCR Representative to Lebanon Ninette Kelley said. “It is a constant challenge to ensure that refugees across more than 1,700 localities remain safe and warm throughout the winter months and have sufficient resources to withstand severe storms.”

Elsewhere in the country, bad weather is affecting refugees living on Mount Lebanon, in Beirut and in the north and south of the country. There are reports that more than 100 tents have been blown over by strong winds in the south of the country.

UNHCR’s 600 staff across five offices in Lebanon are working through the storms, although road closures are affecting some operations. The refugee agency continues to work with partners and local municipalities to map needs and coordinate responses. In preparation for the storm, UNHCR reinforced its contingency stocks of fuel, blankets, wood and shelter materials and put inter-agency teams on standby for emergency responses.

Meanwhile in Jordan, snow began falling on Za’atari camp around midday on Wednesday following earlier snowfall in Jerash, Irbid and Ajloun as well as other locations with high numbers of refugees. The capital, Amman, is also receiving snow.

In preparation for the icy conditions brought by storm Huda, UNHCR has started distributing 20,000 blankets to refugees from Iraq, Somalia and Sudan across Jordan. On Wednesday, UNHCR also distributed 29,000 blankets donated by the United Arab Emirates to Syrian refugees, many of whom live in precarious conditions and are ill prepared for the sub-zero temperatures.

UNHCR’s registration centres in Jordan remain open despite the bad weather, and UNHCR’s helpline for refugees is fully functioning.

In Azraq and Za’atari camps, a campaign informing refugees of looming storms is under way, and advice provided on safe use of heaters and stoves. Additional blankets are also on their way to Azraq. Emergency shelters are in place in Za’atari, where 20 per cent of the population still lives in tents, although there has been no move to these shelters yet.

To help vulnerable refugees living in urban and rural areas survive the winter, UNHCR has given a winter cash grant to 27,000 refugee families to cover essential needs such as heating costs.

UNHCR on Wednesday, meanwhile, deployed more than 60 field staff to monitor the situation in sites around Jordan, address the concerns of refugees and organize distribution of additional aid where needed.

EU offers $180M euros for Syrian refugees in Lebanon, Jordan

Syrian refugees, who fled the violence in Syria, walk at a new refugee camp in Arbil in Iraq's Kurdistan region

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — The European Union offered $180 million euros on Thursday to help Lebanon and Jordan cope with the massive influx of Syrian refugees.

The European Commission said the aid package would help deal with the longer-term problems of the 1.1 million refugees in Lebanon and 630,000 in Jordan.

Some of the funds will also go to Syria itself where the conflict has displaced around half of the population, nearly 11 million people.

Lebanon, a country of just over four million inhabitants, is struggling to shelter 1.5 million Syrian refugees.

“They are sharing our water, electricity, schools and hospitals with us,” said Lebanese prime minister Tammam Salam. “The country was not programmed for this. It was barely programmed to handle its own needs.”

Salam was in the European Parliament on December 2 to discuss his country’s most pressing issues, including efforts to deal with the spill-over of the conflict in Syria.

Salam met European Parliament President Martin Schulz, who he described as “very supportive and enthusiastic about helping Lebanon.”

The $180 million package “addresses in particular the education of children and young adults… as well as measures to improve the resilience of the refugees as well as the communities hosting them through economic development activities,” a Commission statement said.

The EU is a major humanitarian aid donor in the region. It has provided about 1.5 billion euros since the conflict erupted in 2011 while the 28 member states have separately provided about 1.4 billion euros, according to Commission figures.

“We are ready and willing to bring a continued support to the people of Syria and to the neighboring countries hosting Syrian refugees,” EU foreign affairs head Federica Mogherini said. “We are determined to play our role to the full and bring a lasting political solution to this regional crisis.”

Syrian refugees to become third of Lebanese population

lebanon-syrian-refugees(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Syrian refugees in Lebanon will constitute more than a third of Lebanon’s population by the end of 2014, according to a new report released by the United Nations on Thursday.

The report says these numbers are placing a heavy burden on Lebanon’s economy, particularly because of the large influx of refugees, especially children, who constitute 53 percent of total refugees.

“Failing to provide enough humanitarian support for Syrian refugees by the end of 2014 could result in dramatic consequences for refugees and the stability of the entire region, including a serious security threat to Lebanon,” said UN High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres.

The UN says Lebanon will need $1.6 billion to be able to cope with the refugee crisis for the rest of the year. The report adds that only 23 percent of the $1.6 billion has been gathered.

“We no longer have the capacity to carry this burden alone. We have crossed all limits,” Social Affairs Minister Rashid Derbas said.

Lebanon currently hosts 1.1 million refugees, the highest number at 38 percent of Syrian refugees fleeing the war-torn country for other countries in the region.

U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees representative, Ninette Kelley says that 800,000 refugees will be unequipped to face winter, and 30,000 people including Lebanese will not have access to safe drinking water without the necessary financing.

“We need you to stand with us, we need you to stand with Lebanon to ensure that more funding is secured,” she said, addressing donor countries.

According to Central Bank of Lebanon statistics, the country faces a financial burden of $4.5 billion because of the refugee crisis.

Clashes in Sidon refugee camp kill eight

SIDON, Lebanon: Clashes in the Palestinian refugee camp of Mieh Mieh in the coastal city of Sidon killed eight people, including the commander of an armed group, and wounded 10 others Monday, security sources said.

Fighting erupted around noon between supporters of former Fatah commander, Ahmad Rashid Adwan, and members of the armed group Ansar Allah, headed by Jamal Suleiman.

During the clashes, members of Ansar Allah stormed Adwan’s headquarters, killing him and his bodyguard, Ahmad Souri, the sources told The Daily Star.

Adwan’s two brothers, Rashid and Khaled, were also among the fatalities, the National News Agency reported.

Gunmen exchanged gunfire and rocket-propelled grenades for over two hours, the sources said, adding that the clashes subsided around 3 p.m.

The Lebanese Army deployed heavily around Mieh Mieh in a bid to contain the clashes as military units worked to seal off all entrances to the camp.

Palestinian Popular Committees delegation arrived to the camp and held several meetings with Ansar Allah to put an end to the violence and agree on a ceasefire.

Members of the Palestinian group, founded in the 1990s with Iran’s backing, evacuated Adwan’s headquarters as residents in the camp pulled several bodies out of the offices.

A Palestinian official said Monday’s fighting was the result of a personal dispute between members of the two groups.

“There was a personal dispute ten days ago and several factions tried to resolve it but they failed,” head of Aqssa Brigades Munir al-Maqdah told the state-run agency.

Source: The Daily Star

Send this to friend